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Africa finally gets first
female president as defeated soccer tsar calls for peace
November 15, 2005 - (IRIN) Africa won its first female president
on Tuesday when counting ended in Liberia’s historic presidential
poll, with former World Bank economist Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf garnering
59.4 percent against former soccer star George Weah.
"Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has received 4778,526 votes corresponding
to 59.4 percent and George Weah has received 327,046 votes corresponding
to 40.6 percent,” said the head of the election commission, Frances
Johnson-Morris.
While Weah continued to cry foul and demand a reassessment of the
count, he also issued a plea to his supporters to keep their dismay
off the streets for the good “of our fragile peace” and said he
would challenge the results through the legal process.
Tuesday’s provisional results were based on a tally of all votes
but a final official result is expected only next week. Johnson-Morris
said the tally would have to be verified and reconciled by the Commission
before it is declared final.
The presidential poll, held under the watchful eye of international
observers and some 15,000 UN peacekeeping troops, was slated to
seal the peace on a brutal 14-year civil war that ended in 2003.
Weah, a former FIFA footballer of the year who won most of the votes
in the first round of the two-round ballot, on Tuesday reiterated
his claims of "massive fraud" in the run-off.
On Friday, as Weah filed a petition to the Supreme Court to allege
fraud, hundreds of his supporters protested in the streets chanting
"No Weah, No Peace".
They also staged sit-in protests before the offices of the United
Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL), the European Union and the 15-nation
West African regional block, ECOWAS that two years ago brokered
the country's peace, in a bid to have the final results annulled.
But Johnson-Morris said: "I have no authority, nor does the commission,
to overturn the elections results which reflect the will of the
Liberian people.” According to Johnson-Morris, 805, 572 people,
or 60 percent of the electorate turned out to vote last week.
Weah in a statement broadcast on his privately-owned radio station
KINGS FM on Tuesday, a copy of which was given to IRIN, said his
party Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) had been "cheated and
there is strong evidence that the run-off elections were rigged".
His statement said ballot papers were pre-marked in favour of his
rival Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and the commission tally sheets in his
party's possession "shows this pervaded the entire process". But
he ordered a halt to all street protest by his supporters saying
he would follow legal procedures to channel his fraud allegations.
"Public demonstrations in the streets of Monrovia or elsewhere in
protest of the run-off election results is not expedient; it is
not good for our fragile peace; it might even be counter-productive
to the legal bid we have put in motion at the National Elections
Commission," Weah said.
The commission head said public hearings into Weah's complaints
would start on Wednesday.
Diplomats and observers have been meeting with Weah to investigate
his fraud claims.
Some 18 members of his party, the Congress for Democratic Change
(CDC), which is the best represented in a fragmented parliament,
have said that they will not take their seats unless the fraud allegations
are adequately addressed.
International observers meanwhile have declared the elections broadly
free and fair and ECOWAS has urged Weah’s supporters to accept the
results with dignity and grace.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50118&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=LIBERIA
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