Nigerians are going to the polls
to elect a president, with incumbent Goodluck Jonathan facing a strong
challenge from Muhammadu Buhari.
There have been delays and technical problems, partly due to new biometric voter cards.Eyewitnesses say 13 people have been killed in five attacks by gunmen, but it is not clear whether they are Boko Haram militants or political thugs.
The election is said to be the most closely fought since independence.
It was postponed from mid-February to allow the army to recapture territory from the Islamist militants of Boko Haram.
The two main candidates have pledged to prevent violence.
Voters are also electing members of the house of representatives and the senate.
By 12:30 local time (11:30 GMT), 81% of polling stations were open, according to the Transitional Monitoring Group (TMG), the largest body observing the elections.
Voters need to register first using biometric cards with their fingerprints before they can cast their vote.
However, at some polling stations, card readers are working slowly or not at all.
President Jonathan tried for some 50 minutes to register in his home village of Otuoke. A BBC reporter at the scene says he had to come back a second time and when the electronic registration failed again, he had to be accredited manually.
Problems were also reported from the north's biggest city of Kano, where thousands of voters waited for election officials and voting materials to arrive.
"We've been here since six o'clock and now it's half-past nine," Ismail Omar, a 65-year-old builder told AFP news agency.
"No-one has shown up from Inec (the Independent National Electoral Commission)... This is a deliberate attempt to sabotage the elections."
But Gen Buhari registered in his hometown Daura without any problems and he praised the accreditation system.
"If people are allowed to vote, rigging will actually be impossible under this system," he said.
After
some problems with the electronic card reader, President Jonathan was
finally registered manually and has now cast his vote
Gen Muhammadu Buhari arriving to register in his home town Daura, voting card in hand
At a polling station outside Abjua, voter Jibrin says he'll wait all day and night to cast his vote
Many voters had to queue for hours just to registerLike Us on Facebook!
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