Kuwait Times

Liberia votes to replace Africa’s 1st female leader

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MONROVIA: Liberians began voting yesterday to replace President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, in a contest set to complete the country’s first democratic transition of power in more than 70 years. Voting opened at 8:00 am in the small West African nation, although there were delays in some polling stations, capping a campaign hailed for vibrant and violence-free debates and rallies. Africa’s first female elected head of state, Sirleaf is stepping aside after a maximum two six-year terms.

In an eve-of-election speech, she urged a peaceful vote, and for the results to be respected by all. “The future of the country is in your hands, no one is entitled to your vote, not because of party, ethnicity, religion or tribal affiliatio­n,” Sirleaf, a co-winner of the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize, declared. The country’s 2.18 million registered voters are choosing from a crowded field of 20 presidenti­al candidates-although just one of them is a woman-and will also elect 73 seats in the House of Representa­tives (lower chamber).

Among the frontrunne­rs are footballin­g icon George Weah, incumbent Vice President Joseph Boakai, longtime opposition figure Charles Brumskine and former Coca-Cola executive Alexander Cummings. Also waiting in the wings with potentiall­y significan­t vote shares are telecoms tycoon Benoni Urey and former central bank governor Mills Jones. Back-to-back civil wars, the 201416 Ebola crisis and slumped commodity prices have left Liberia among the world’s poorest nations, while corruption remains entrenched. Christmas Kamara, a market trader waiting to vote in Liberia’s biggest slum, Westpoint, said she felt betrayed by the government during the Ebola crisis and would not vote for Boakai.

“We need healthcare and hospitals,” she said. “Our people are dying because of the lack of hospitals,” Kamara added, shaking her head and recalling the rioting that broke out in 2014 when the crisis was at its height. In Monrovia, the poorest voters seem to overwhelmi­ngly favor Weah, although his choice for vicepresid­ent Jewel Howard-Taylor, the ex-wife of Liberian warlord Charles Taylor, may hit his support in other areas of the country. The ghosts of Liberia’s bloody past are hard to avoid in this election. Ex-rebel leader Prince Johnson is also running for president, though a fifth of Liberia’s registered voters are aged 18-22 and are less likely, analysts say, to vote along the ethnic or tribal lines that divided the nation during the war.

The first official results are expected within 48 hours after voting closes at 6:00 pm. If no candidate wins 50 percent of the presidenti­al vote, then a run-off of the top two contenders will be held on November 7 - an outcome analysts say is a near certainty. Sirleaf’s Unity Party swept the vote in 2005 and 2011, results that Weah’s Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) contested in court. Boakai, Weah’s most significan­t rival, has undertaken a delicate balancing act to promote his record in government while distancing himself from Sirleaf to define his own vision.

Martin Saylee, a 28-year-old sociology student and a Boakai voter said while voting at the University of Liberia that the vice president could deliver job creation. “Boakai is the most qualified. He is the one I believe will take this country to another level,” Saylee told AFP. Upstart businessma­n Cummings has eaten into Weah’s support among Liberia’s youth, and his fans were also out in force across polling stations. “We need a new breed of leaders. Mr Cummings is educated and that is what Liberians need most. Education brings insight,” pastor Fred Slocum told AFP, joining a line hundreds of people long at William V.S. Tubman high school.

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