DEMOCRACY NOW

LATEST:

Grab the widget  Tech Dreams

Latest on Democracy

Blaise Compaore re-elected in Burkina Faso landslide

Sunday, November 28, 2010


President Blaise Compaore, December 2002. (File photoBlaise Compaore has led Burkina Faso for 23 years.

Related stories

Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore has been re-elected to lead the gold-producing country in a landslide victory.
Provisional results show that Mr Compaore, who seized power in a bloody coup, won the vote by 80%.
But opposition leaders are calling for the vote to be invalidated claiming it was rigged in Mr Compaore's favour.
Mr Compaore, a former army captain, took power in 1987 after a hit squad gunned down the former president.
On Thursday, a judge ruled that some of the voter cards were "illegal" following a law suit last week which challenged certain aspects of the election.
"The cards were not in conformity with the electoral code," AFP news agency quotes Judge Rene Bagoro as saying.
Opposition parties said the voting cards had allowed ineligible people to vote. They have 48 hours from the time the results are released to file a complaint.

Read more...

Ivory Coast votes in presidential election run-off



Soldiers stand guard outside presidential palace in Abidjan (27 November 2010)A night curfew has been imposed, angering the opposition camp

Related stories

People in the Ivory Coast have been voting in a presidential election run-off, as the nation tries to end a decade of division and instability.
A close race is forecast between President Laurent Gbagbo and opposition candidate Alassane Ouattara.
The election is intended to reunite the country which split in two following a northern rebellion in 2002.
A night curfew has been imposed and will run until Wednesday, following a campaign beset by violence.
At least three people were shot dead in Abidjan on Saturday during protests against the curfew. Supporters of the opposition say it could open the door to electoral fraud.
The military has appealed for calm.
Additional security forces have been deployed around the country and both Mr Gbagbo and Mr Ouattara have appealed for a peaceful vote.
Polling stations opened at 0700 GMT and closed at 1700 GMT, with 5.7 million people eligible to vote.
Long queues were reported in Abidjan while some stations opened late as the curfew prevented ballot officials from arriving on time.
Mr Gbagbo said he had received reports of "irregularities" in some parts of the country, but was was confident the election would be a success.
"We have a lot of hope we will overcome all these irregularities to put in place a veritable democracy," he told reporters.
'Illegal'
Yves Doumbia, a spokesman for the mayor in Abidjan's Abobo neighbourhood, said the three people killed on Saturday died when police opened fire on a crowd which had become unmanageable.

Presidential Contenders

Left: Laurent Gbagbo Right: Alassane Ouattara
Laurent Gbagbo (left)
  • Age: 65
  • Southerner, Christian
  • Former history teacher, now president
  • Took 38% of the first-round vote
Alassane Ouattara (right)
  • Age: 68
  • Northerner, Muslim
  • Economist and former prime minister
  • Took 32% of the first-round vote
"The police used tear gas and fired live rounds at a crowd, killing three and wounding seven," he told Reuters news agency.
The curfew was announced after earlier clashes in and around Abidjan, the commercial capital, in which at least four people were killed and dozens injured.
Mr Ouattara said the curfew was illegal and unconstitutional, arguing it should only come after the election if there was trouble.
No candidate received more than 50% of the vote in the first round four weeks ago, leaving the two front runners to go head to head.
The result is expected to be extremely close, says the BBC's John James in Abidjan - testament to the fact these are the first open democratic elections the country has seen in 50 years since independence.
The two candidates left in the race represent the two sides of the north-south divide that exists religiously, culturally and administratively, our correspondent says, with the northern half still controlled in part by the soldiers who took part in the 2002 rebellion.
The elections have been cancelled six times in the past five years.

Read more...

Egypt holds parliamentary poll


A woman votes in Alexandria, Egypt (28 Nov 2010)Turnout is not expected to be much above 10%

Related stories

Egyptians have been voting in a parliamentary poll after a campaign that saw clashes between the opposition and security forces.
The ruling NDP party is expected to win the election easily.
Interest centres on whether the officially banned Muslim Brotherhood retains its position as the biggest opposition grouping.
Earlier, the son of a candidate was killed in Cairo but it was unclear whether it was election-related.
There have also been unconfirmed reports of some violence outside the capital involving supporters of the government and the Muslim Brotherhood.
In 2005, its supporters won about a fifth of the seats, standing as independent candidates.
The BBC's Jon Leyne in Cairo says turnout is not expected to be much above 10% as most Egyptians have long since lost faith in politics and politicians.
Voting complaints
The man who was killed this weekend was putting up posters for his father, an independent candidate, in the hours before voting started.

PARLIAMENTARY VOTE

  • 508 members to be elected, 10 appointed by president
  • 254 constituencies each return two MPs
  • Candidate has to get more than 50% to win outright
  • Candidates are elected for five years
Relatives said he was attacked in a poor neighbourhood by two men, and stabbed to death.
They said it was politically motivated, although the authorities have suggested the crime was about a personal matter.
There were other reports of confrontation and violence around the country.
In the northern city of Alexandria, a stronghold of the Muslim Brotherhood, there was a tense stand-off between their supporters and backers of the NDP.
Muslim Brotherhood candidates must stand as independents if they wish to take part in the election, but their supporters said they had been prevented from voting.
"There's no voting going on, just rigging. It's a disgrace," said one voter. "There was no privacy. The ballot boxes were full."
But Abdel-Salam Mahgoub, an NDP candidate in Alexandria, told Reuters the Muslim Brotherhood were "looking for an excuse to cover their failure".
Widespread criticism
Many people have stayed home, fearing election day violence, and the streets of Cairo are exceptionally quiet, our correspondent says.
Some 42m voters are eligible to cast their ballots, with results expected within several days.
People in Cairo walk in front of election poster featuring President Hosni Mubarak (left) and a ruling NDP candidatePresident Hosni Mubarak (left, on poster) has ruled Egypt for nearly 30 years
The new parliament will have 518 members, 508 of whom will be elected and 10 will be appointed by presidential decree.
Each of the 254 constituencies will return two MPs representing two sets of people: workers and farmers represent one group, and professionals the other. According to the constitution, the former must account for at least half of all MPs.
The winners are decided on a first-past-the-post basis. To win outright, a candidate must get more than 50% of the vote. Otherwise, the top two battle it out in a second round.
There has already been widespread criticism of the way the election has been conducted.
In a number of seats, the courts have called for the elections to be postponed, because opposition candidates were illegally struck off the ballot.
Some observers believe that the ruling party may win an embarrassingly large victory, further undermining the credibility of these elections.

Read more...

Ghana Pundit News