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The coalition Co-ordinator, Mr Olufemi Lawson, made the call at a news conference on Thursday in Ikeja.
Lawson said the result should not be allowed to stand as it did not reflect the choice of Bayelsans.
He said reports by the coalition, comprising civil society groups which monitored the election and some other local and international observers, indicated that the election was not credible as it was characterised by irregularities.
The coordinator said there were many proven cases of violence during the election as well as many cases of ballot snatching and stuffing.
Lawson said security agencies did not perform their expected responsibility to ensure the election was peaceful.
”We are miffed at the inability and failure of security agencies to intervene or try to stop hoodlums from perpetrating violence, especially in the snatching of ballot boxes and disruption of collation process at the polling units.
”We are sad that till this moment, not a single perpetrator or sponsor of the violence which characterised the election has been arrested, despite the huge damages, including the loss of lives experienced.
”We are also calling on all partners, particularly the international community to consider appropriate sanctions, including visa ban, for the perpetrators of violence in the elections and their sponsors,” he said.
He said both elections were highly militarised and were marked by malpractices.
Babatunde said the governorship election in Bayelsa greatly fell short of democratic standards, adding that the result did not reflect the wish of the people.
He said the conduct of both Kogi and Bayelsa elections should compel the need to reform the country’s electoral system for better polls.
Babatunde added that if what happened during both elections was anything to go by, INEC might not deliver credible elections in 2023.