Printers of Nigeria election regalia lose out as ad campaigns pivot online

07 February 2023 - 13:08 By Abraham Achirga and Sofia Christensen
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Branded T-shirts and baseball caps with images of Nigerian presidential candidates at a shopping centre in Abuja, Nigeria in February 2023.
Branded T-shirts and baseball caps with images of Nigerian presidential candidates at a shopping centre in Abuja, Nigeria in February 2023.
Image: ABRAHAM ACHIRGA/Reuters

A loud whir filled the back of a print shop in Nigeria's capital Abuja as machines churned out grinning faces of presidential election front-runners on posters, flyers and food packaging.

Workers poured cassava flour into blue and green bags sporting the governing All Progressives Congress party's acronym and stashed them next to a pile of red and green opposition rice packets. The advertising campaign season is in full throttle.

The run-up to a vote is usually a chance for small businesses like Shimatex Prints to cash in on election paraphernalia ranging from hats and flip-flops to tissue boxes and cooking oil labels.

However, business has been slower than usual ahead of the February 25 vote as candidates have hinged more campaigning on social media.

A worker prints on baseball caps at a printing shop in Abuja, Nigeria in February 2023.
A worker prints on baseball caps at a printing shop in Abuja, Nigeria in February 2023.
Image: ABRAHAM ACHIRGA/Reuters

“Printing-wise [there is] not much difference in our orders,” said Shimatex Prints CEO Joel Mtsor, recalling busier periods around the 2011, 2015 and 2019 polls.

“A few souvenirs, a few campaign materials, a few billboards. The impact on the print industry is not as good as it was,” he told Reuters.

Nigerians will vote for a new leader to replace President Muhammadu Buhari amid growing insecurity and economic hardship. The three front-runners have promised to reduce living costs, boost growth and tackle rising levels of violence.

As Africa's most populous country, Nigeria is home to tens of millions of internet users, prompting candidates to compete for voters' attention across popular platforms such as Facebook, Tiktok, Twitter and YouTube.

Social media has been a key campaigning tool before a poll in which almost 40% of registered voters are 34 or younger, according to electoral commission data.

Not everything has moved online, however, as parties continue to commission political regalia for rallies and other in-person campaign events.

At a printing mall in Abuja's business hub, workers pasted party logos on baseball caps and sewed candidates' portraits onto T-shirts. Bold political slogans flashed from white scarves hanging in the background.

“It is what we want. The most craziest of orders for a printer is a good job,” said print shop owner Opeyemi Osho-Arilomo.

Reuters


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