
Liberia’s election results were
delayed on Wednesday by hitches at a number of polling stations, with Vice
President Joseph Boakai and footballer George Weah seen as the frontrunners to
succeed Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Former international Liberian football icon
turned politician and presidential election candidate George Weah (C) prepares
to cast his vote at a polling station in Monrovia, on October 10, 2017, during
the Liberia presidential elections. Liberians began voting to replace the
incumbent president in a contest set to complete the country’s first democratic
transition of power in more than 70 years. / AFP PHOTO The National Elections
Commission (NEC) is expected to announce the first official results from the
presidential and legislative elections on Thursday. If no candidate wins 50
percent of the presidential vote, a run-off between the top two contenders will
be held on November 7, an outcome analysts say is a near certainty. Turnout for
Liberia’s first democratic transfer of power in seven decades was exceptionally
high, the electoral panel has suggested. It admitted that staff at polling
stations had in some cases caused long waits for voters and widespread
confusion, and many closed as late as 3am, triggering the delay. Controversy
erupted after some voters were directed to the wrong polling place or were made
to stand in hot sun followed by heavy rain for hours, leading the NEC to
apologise for the conduct of staff who misdirected voters. “We have already
admitted that our queue controllers at various polling places were not at their
best,” NEC Chairman Jerome Korkoya told journalists. “They were supposed to
direct voters to the proper line they were assigned. From all indications in
many places they didn’t do that and we take responsibility for that,” he
admitted. Staff training would be reformed for the next election, he added. One
district in northeastern Nimba will also have a re-run after a failure to open
all four polling places. The nation’s 2.18 million registered voters made their
choice from a crowded field of 20 presidential candidates — including just one
woman — and elected 73 parliamentarians for the lower chamber, the House of
Representatives. Longtime opposition figure Charles Brumskine and upstart
former Coca-Cola executive Alexander Cummings are deemed to be close on the
heels of Weah and Boakai. – Parties blame NEC – Political parties voiced
concern at the problems. “Some people will stand in the queue for hours just to
be told at the end that you have to go to the other line. Some people could not
stand that, and we are very concerned,” said Moore Allen, a spokesman for the
Unity Party (UP), which is backing Vice President Boakai. “It is NEC
responsibility to show voters the way in a manner that they will not make
mistakes,” echoed Ansu Sunny, a spokesman for Weah’s Coalition for Democratic
Change (CDC), though said they did not believe the problem was of a huge
magnitude. In the 2005 and 2011 presidential elections, Weah’s CDC party and
Sirleaf’s Unity Party went into the run-off round of voting. The vote is seen
as a crucial test of Liberia’s stability. Sirleaf, Africa’s first female
elected head of state, is stepping down after a maximum two six-year terms in
which she steered the country away from the trauma of civil war, but, say
critics, failed to tackle its poverty. – ‘More resources’ – Joe Pemagbi, an
electoral observer for the Open Society Initiative for West Africa, said
dialogue between the parties in the period before a possible second round was
key to avoiding conflict. Liberian Vice President and presidential candidate
Joseph Boakai (C) attends to cast his vote at a polling station in Monrovia during
presidential elections on October 10, 2017. Liberians began voting on October
10 to replace the incumbent president, in a contest set to complete the
country’s first democratic transition of power in more than 70 years. / AFP
PHOTO “A lot more resources need to be put into civic and voter education,
because that’s key to how people respond to some of these challenges,”
including frustration over being unable to cast ballots, Pemagbi said. “People
should be pushing for peaceful dialogue and inter-party dialogue,” he added,
saying it “is extremely important at this point in time”. The US State
Department hailed the vote as “an important step toward achieving Liberia’s
first peaceful transfer of power from one democratically-elected head of state
to another in decades”. Back-to-back civil wars, the 2014-16 Ebola crisis and
slumped commodity prices have left Liberia among the world’s poorest nations,
while corruption remains entrenched.
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