National Freedom Council's Agathon Rwasa files case in
constitutional court, claiming evidence of fraud in May 20 polls.
Rwasa said if the court did not rule in his party's favour, the party would take the case to the East African Court of Justice in Arusha, Tanzania [Evrard Ngendakumana/Reuters]
Burundi's
election commission said on Monday the governing party candidate, retired
General Evariste Ndayishimiye, had won the presidential election with 69
percent of the vote. It added that candidate Agathon Rwasa got 24 percent of the vote and the election was peaceful.
But Rwasa, the opposition leader of the National Freedom
Council (CNL), while speaking to reporters on Thursday after filing the
complaint, said "appalling errors were made across the country,"
adding that "no district or province was spared".
"We
have provided evidence that there has been a massive fraud," Rwasa said.
"The announced results are false."
The
court will have until June 5 to decide the case.
Rwasa
said if the court did not rule in the CNL's favour, the party would take the
case to the East African Court of Justice in Arusha, Tanzania.
If
the legal challenge is not successful, Ndayishimiye will be inaugurated in
August for a seven-year term.
Reports of
political violence
The
May 20 vote to replace President Pierre Nkurunziza had been preceded by reports
political violence including the arrest, torture and murder of opposition
activists, according to a local rights group and Amnesty International.
There
was also controversy over holding the election during the coronavirus pandemic,
which critics argued posed a public health risk.
There
were also no foreign observers present, as the government said they would have
to quarantine for 14 days upon arrival in the country.
The
country's last election in 2015 was marked by violence, with hundreds of
Burundians killed and hundreds of thousands exiled during the unrest, in which
the opposition accused Nkurunziza of violating a peace deal by running for a
third term.
Rwasa
said the evidence in his filing showed that people had voted using dead voters'
identities, that polling stations had used an electoral register that has never
been published by the electoral body, and that ballot boxes had been stuffed.
While
the East African Community, a regional body, gave the election a clean bill of
health on Tuesday, the Conference of Bishops of Burundi criticised the conduct
during the polling, saying observers from some parties had been chased from
polling stations.
A
joint statement issued by western diplomats on Wednesday made no reference to
any irregularities and urged the opposition to pursue legal paths to contest
the election outcome.
The
electoral body's officials were not immediately reachable to comment on Rwasa's
complaints.
Five
other candidates also stood in the polls, in which 5.11 million registered
voters were eligible to participate.
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