Former President John Mahama has said the election ongoing in Liberia has generally been peaceful.
He is leading an ECOWAS observer mission to monitor the election in
that country and noted that although there were few hitches and late
start of voting in some polling centres, the process has been “so far so
good”.
“Of course, every electoral system has some glitches, but as the day goes on, they resolve the issue.
“In a few polling stations they didn’t start on time, they started
around
8:30 am. In the places that we have visited, it looks like the
process is ongoing now,” former President Mahama said.
Liberians are currently casting their ballots to elect a new president and legislators for the country
This is the third time Liberians are going to the polls after the war that ravaged the country.
The incumbent president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf — Africa’s first female
president — is ineligible to run this time because she has exhausted the
limits on the constitutionally mandated term.
“In the run-up to the election, there were complaints about the late
training of presiding officers and electoral officers, and its beginning
to show.
“In some stations, you find that the electoral officers are very
confident and they know what they are doing, but in other stations, they
were a bit on unsure what to do.
“But otherwise, I think that the glitches are largely resolved and you can see that the process is ongoing.
“Of course the queues are long, I’m sure that if the process is
quickened, by late afternoon a lot of people should have had the
opportunity to vote,” former President Mahama added.
Mr. Mahama left Accra last Thursday to Liberia to monitor the general elections.
Over 800 candidates representing 26 political parties are said to be
contesting for the legislative slots, and 20 candidates vying to replace
the incumbent president in Liberia, with a population of about 5
million.
John Mahama had recently been ridiculed after he led a Commonwealth
observer mission to monitor the elections in Kenya, the country that had
its presidential election results later overturned by the Supreme Court
following alleged malpractices.
Although the former Ghanaian President has not publicly spoken on the
matter ever since the results were overturned, several people including
the Executive Director of the Institute for Democratic Governance, Dr.
Emmanuel Akwetey, has said Mahama should be left alone because observer
missions do not have investigative powers
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