Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guyana coalition declared winner

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GEORGETOWN, Guyana — The election commission in oil-rich Guyana has declared that the governing coalition won the country’s disputed vote, despite internatio­nal concerns about the credibilit­y of the process.

The commission said late Friday that it will move this weekend to verify vote totals in the March 2 general election as internatio­nal observer groups said the tallying was flawed and not transparen­t.

Barring any successful court challenges, the governing coalition led by retired army Gen. David Granger, 74, would begin a second fiveyear term in office.

Coalition officials said they plan to swear in Granger on Monday.

Joseph Harmon, a campaign manager of the governing coalition, appealed for calm.

“Not a single finger has been lifted against the president and the coalition regarding fraud,” Harmon said.

However, the main opposition People’s Progressiv­e Party, led by former housing minister Irfaan Ali, along with some observer groups have complained about their inability to verify numbers provided by election officials.

An observer team from the Washington-based Organizati­on of American States, headed by former Jamaican prime minister Bruce Golding, withdrew from the monitoring process on Friday and said its final report in the coming weeks will reflect dissatisfa­ction with the system.

The U.S. and several other Western ambassador­s who were monitoring the counting as accredited observers also walked out of the counting late Friday, saying they were unhappy with the lack of a verificati­on system.

The final tallying process was held up by disputes over results for a district including Georgetown, the capital, and nearby areas.

Whichever political group wins this key district by at least 40,000 votes is usually the winner of the national election.

The results released overnight Friday gave the governing coalition 136,057 votes for the district and 77,231 to the People’s Progressiv­e Party, amounting to a coalition lead of two seats over the opposition in the 65-seat congress.

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