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imageABUJA: The head of Nigeria's electoral commission said on Tuesday the country will hold a presidential election as scheduled on Feb. 14, rejecting a call from one of the president's advisors to delay them.

"We remain committed to implementing the timetable," commission head Attahiru Jega told a news conference.

President Goodluck Jonathan's National Security Advisor Sambo Dasuki said last week that Nigeria should delay the election to allow more time for permanent voter cards (PVCs) to be distributed. Some 30 million have yet to be handed out.

"We do not believe that the challenges of PVC distribution are such that it warrants rescheduling the election," Jega said.

The opposition rejected Dasuki's comments as an attempt to let the date slip because of fears Jonathan and the ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP) might lose. How Nigeria, which has Africa's biggest economy, conducts the polls will be closely watched by investors and foreign powers since past ones were marred by thuggery and ballot box stuffing.

The elections will be the first where Nigeria's 68.8 million voters must have a biometric cards, a measure introduced to guard against fraud that has plagued past polls. But delays in getting the cards out to voters -- there is no functioning postal service in Nigeria -- have cast doubts over whether the deadline can be met. "There are systemic challenges affecting distribution. Nigeria is not a country where you can mail cards...there is no guarantee it will reach its destination," Jega said.

There are also doubts about how they will hold the election in parts of the northeast under attack by Boko Haram insurgents.

Copyright Reuters, 2015

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