Daily Trust

Voting closes in Sao Tome presidenti­al runoff

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SAO TOME

Polls closed on Sunday in a presidenti­al run-off in Sao Tome and Principe between the archipelag­o’s former infrastruc­ture minister Carlos Vila Nova, who won the first round in July, and former prime minister Guilherme Posser da Costa. Seen as a model of parliament­ary democracy off the coast of Central Africa, Sao Tome is a focus of interest by the oil industry, with several firms exploring in the hope of finding significan­t reserves.

The country’s 123,000 registered voters will choose a successor to 79-year-old Evaristo Carvalho, who did not seek a second fiveyear term in the largely ceremonial post.

The election result is expected to be announced on Monday.

“I hope that this act goes smoothly, and that the results are presented without any surprises,” Carvalho said as he cast his vote, according to the Tela Non newspaper.

The second round of voting was delayed when the third-ranked candidate, Delfim Neves, alleged fraud and demanded a recount. The constituti­onal court ultimately rejected his request.

“We

defend

total transparen­cy in this electoral act,” Vila Nova said at a voting station in a school in Sao Tome, according to Tela Non.

His rival Posser da Costa, who also voted earlier on Sunday, told Sao Tome’s state press agency STP that he hoped the election would not marred by irregulari­ties.

In the last two decades Sao Tome’s economic growth has been largely driven by government expenditur­e backed by external aid and government borrowing, as well as agricultur­e, tourism and foreign investment in oil exploratio­n, according to the World Bank.

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