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CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Vote-counting under way after elections - OCHA IRIN
Friday 18 March 2005
 
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CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Vote-counting under way after elections


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  IRIN

Posters of presidential candidates in the capital, Bangui.

BANGUI, 14 Mar 2005 (IRIN) - Votes were being counted on Monday in the Central African Republic (CAR), the day after presidential and parliamentary elections marked by delays in many polling stations.

The country's electoral body, the Mixed Independent Electoral Commission (CEMI), has 15 days to announce the results of the polls.

On Sunday, several voting centres opened hours behind schedule in the capital, Bangui. Illiterate voters had to be helped, not least to differentiate the presidential from the parliamentary ballots.

Voting in several districts was delayed due to lack of ballot papers. Delays ranged from half an hour in Bangui's 8th District, to five hours in the 5th District, the capital’s most populated area. In the 6th District, some voters had to wait for eight hours, despite arriving at 5 a.m. to cast their votes.

"I have been queuing for six hours and now they tell me I can't vote because my voter's card does not have number. I'm not the one who produced the card," Leila Abdaraman, 36, told IRIN.

Delays were also observed in provincial towns such as Berbérati, in Mambere Kadei Province.

"These problems are due to laxity of some persons responsible - of the local electoral committees or some supervisors," Remi Sakanga, CEMI's spokesman, said.

Radio Centrafrique, a state-owned radio station, carried reports on Monday that angry voters had destroyed electoral material in the CAR embassy in Paris, France. As a result, CEMI's chairman, Jean Wilibiro-Sacko, announced on national radio on Monday that the vote in Paris would be cancelled. However, those in the French cities of Lyon and Bordeaux were unaffected.

He also said that 25 people had been arrested in Bangui after they were found in possession of 500 ballot papers.

Two days before the end of the electoral campaign, the opposition group Union des forces de vives de la nation (UFVN) accused a coalition of businessmen and parties supporting President François Bozize of fraud. At a meeting at Stade Bonga-Bong, UFVN accused Convergence Kwa Na Kwa of buying voter cards in bulk. Bozize's supporters denied the accusation.

The election results will bring to an end the two-year transitional government installed by Bozize after he seized power from President Ange-Felix Patasse on 15 March 2003.

Eleven candidates stood for the presidency on Sunday, while 900 candidates vied for 105 parliamentary seats.

CEMI has 15 days to proclaim the results of this first ballot; no date has been announced for a second ballot should one be required.

[ENDS]


Other recent CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC reports:

Post-election focus – a country in crisis or recovery?,  18/Mar/05

Bozize sacks his deputy,  16/Mar/05

Pre-election interview with Lamine Cisse, UN special representative,  11/Mar/05

Little help for people made homeless by bush fires,  7/Mar/05

Interview with Vice-President Abel Goumba,  2/Mar/05

Other recent Democracy & Governance reports:

MIDDLE EAST: MIDDLE EAST: Weekly round-up Number 13 for 12-18 March 2005, 18/Mar/05

SOMALIA: MPs wounded as fighting breaks out during peacekeeping debate, 18/Mar/05

BURKINA FASO: Dial SOS Circumcision and stop girls being cut, 18/Mar/05

ETHIOPIA: Q/A with Prime Minister Meles Zenawi on Africa Commission report, 18/Mar/05

BURKINA FASO: Genital mutilation -- a knife-wielder and a victim tell their tales, 18/Mar/05

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