There have been rough incident at a few polling stations in Lagos.
At one visit by the BBC, in Channels Estate, in Ajah, a suburb of Lagos, a group of men were seen holding jugs and sticks and leaving voting form papers spread on the ground.
"There was anarchy, people took off for their lives. We didn't anticipate it. We've been here since morning and this people appeared suddenly and tossed everything out," Mrs Okonta, a citizen, told the BBC.
No military or security presence should have been visible at the middle by the BBC at the time the incident happened.
"We are persevering and we will make this cast since it's our future and the eventual fate of our kids," Mr Ade, another elector, told the BBC.
In AtIgbokusu, close to the Lekki area of Lagos, Radiant Njokua let the BBC know that a group of young men showed up holding jugs and blades and pursued individuals away.
"They took the Inec authorities' telephones and took the three voting stations, presently races have been disturbed and ended," he asserted.
The BBC could see thumb-printed voting form papers and broken surveying stalls littered by and large around the unit, and a portion of individuals who were there to cast a ballot introduced minor wounds and injuries.
Resting on the arms of her better half, who had a draining arm, Dr Okoli Nkem, was limping a direct result of a hyper-extended lower leg.
She says it was a quiet air as license and casting a ballot had started until the area was tossed into disarray.
"Bottles were flying in the air and covered men moved toward the surveying unit. They broke the crates and took the telephones of the constituent authorities and presently we can't cast a ballot," Dr Nkem said.
Following Nigerian armed force officials showed up at the scene and guaranteed electors of their wellbeing.
Source :BBC