Kagame wins third term

06 Aug, 2017 - 00:08 0 Views
Kagame wins third term

The Sunday Mail

KIGALI. — Incumbent leader Paul Kagame has swept to a landslide victory in Rwanda’s presidential election, results showed early yesterday, securing a third term in office and extending his 17 years in power.

With 80 percent of votes counted from Friday’s election, the 59-year-old former guerrilla leader had secured 98.66 percent, the National Electoral Commission’s executive secretary Charles Munyaneza told a news conference.

“We expect that even if we get 100 percent of votes, there will not be any change,” he said.

The full count was expected later on Saturday.

The board expects turnout to have topped 90 percent in the East African country of 12 million people, in an election that fielded only a single opposition candidate, Frank Habineza, and an independent.

Kagame said he would work to sustain economic growth in the tiny nation. “This is another seven years to take care of issues that affect Rwandans and ensure that we become real Rwandans who are (economically) developing,” he said in a speech broadcast live on television.

Kagame, a commander who led Tutsi rebel forces into Rwanda to end the 1994 genocide, banned the use of tribal terms after becoming president.

He won the last election in 2010 with 93 percent of the vote and had said during this campaign for a further seven-year term that he again expected an outright victory.

Habineza had promised to set up a tribunal to retry dissidents whose convictions by Rwandan courts have been criticised as politically-motivated.

Another would-be opponent, Diane Rwigara, was disqualified by the election board despite her insistence that she met all the requirements to run.

Some voters celebrated the election result into the early hours of Saturday, said John Habimana, owner of the popular Roasty Bar in the capital Kigali.

“Last night was fantastic. People kept coming in until my bar had more than 200 people. I usually get 100 on normal days. They were all celebrating and I left at 2 am, but they were still dancing and more were coming,” he said.

Other residents were less happy.

“To me, I see this as a one-man race. I simply did not go to vote,” said one man in Kigali who asked not to be named. — Reuters

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