2010 Nigerien constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in Niger on 31 October 2010, after the military coup earlier in the year had ousted elected President Mamadou Tandja.[1] General elections followed on 31 January and 12 March 2011. Approved by 90% of voters, the constitution granted immunity to the coup leaders and stipulated that they had to hand over power by 6 April 2011.[2] They did so as promised following the January–March 2011 general elections. The approval of the referendum also restored the semi-presidential system of government which had been abolished in the disputed referendum in 2009.

2010 Nigerien constitutional referendum
31 October 2010
Do you approve of the draft Constitution submitted to your sanction?
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 3,086,473 90.19%
No 335,677 9.81%
Valid votes 3,422,150 97.88%
Invalid or blank votes 74,202 2.12%
Total votes 3,496,352 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 6,720,335 52.03%

Results

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Choice Votes %
For 3,086,473 90.19
Against 335,677 9.81
Invalid/blank votes 74,202
Total 3,496,352 100
Registered voters/turnout 6,720,335 52.02
Source: African Elections Database

References

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