Rivals condemned Alassane Ouattara’s bid as illegal and
urged supporters to stay home
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An election worker counting ballots after voting closed in the first round of the presidential elections in Abidjan last week. Photograph: Legnan Koula/EPA |
Alassane Ouattara has won a third term in power in Ivory Coast after an election boycotted by the opposition.
The 78-year old president, who had once pledged to make way
for a younger generation, took 94% of the vote. Two terms in office is widely
seen as the limit set by the west African country’s 2016 constitution.
The main opposition candidates condemned Ouattara’s attempt
to win a third term as illegal and had urged their supporters to stay at home
as an act of civil disobedience.
Political crisis has consumed Ivory Coast since the death in
July of Ouattara’s planned successor, the prime minister, Amadou Gon Coulibaly.
Ouattara had been expected to leave office but reneged on his pledge, arguing
the constitution did not prevent him. The disqualification of 40 opposition
candidates and criticisms from his two main challengers increased tensions in a
country where the spectre of electoral violence looms large.
Thousands have fled to Liberia, Ghana and Togo in recent weeks, fearing the
possibility of the same sort of post-election violence that killed 3,000 people
in 2010. In the run-up to Saturday’s vote, protests against Ouattara had grown,
particularly in opposition strongholds. Clashes with rival groups and a
forceful response by security forces left at least 30 people dead, according to
Amnesty International. Five more people were killed on election day. In a sign
of mounting tensions over the vote, Outtara’s two main opponents said their
homes had been shot at overnight.
The Carter Center, a US non-governmental organisation that
monitored the election, expressed “concerns that the overall context and
process did not allow for a genuinely competitive election”.
“The process excluded a number of Ivorian political forces and
was hampered by an active boycott by a segment of the population and a volatile
security environment,” it added.
The electoral commission said early on Tuesday that Ouattara
received 94.3% of the vote. Turnout was 53.9%, according to election officials,
although the opposition has said only 10% of Ivorian voters took part.
The former prime minister Pascal Affi N’Guessan, a leading
opponent of Ouattara, said the result was illegitimate. “This was a sham
election … marred by many irregularities and a low turnout,” he told reporters
on Monday when it was clear Ouattara was going to win. N’Guessan vowed to form
an alternative “transitional government”, deepening political tensions with
Ouattara’s government.
“The opposition parties and groups announce the creation of a council of
national transition,” N’Guessan told reporters. Yet divisions within his own
party, the Ivorian Popular Front, and among other senior figures in a weakened
opposition, has left the plan in doubt.
The president’s supporters cite a 2016 constitutional change
that they say means Ouattara’s first term effectively did not count.
Amid deepening insecurity across much of west Africa, third-term bids
and attempts to amend national constitutions have re-emerged in recent years in
Guinea, the Gambia and Ivory Coast. The moves have fuelled disillusionment,
particularly among younger populations who seek greater representation in
government, transparency and freedoms.
Ouattara, a former rebel leader, along with both main opposition figures, the
86-year-old former president, Henri Konan Bédié, and 67-year-old N’Guessan, are
among an ageing political class that have maintained their grip of Ivorian
politics for years.
Ouattara was the internationally recognised winner of the
disputed 2010 election when the then president, Laurent Gbagbo, refused to
concede defeat. Both men held their own inauguration ceremonies and the
standoff persisted for months until pro-Ouattara forces captured Gbagbo from
his underground bunker.
Gbagbo was later acquitted of crimes against humanity at the
international criminal court, though prosecutors are appealing against the
decision. Critics say Ouattara’s government has failed to bring about national
reconciliation, concentrating prosecutions on the crimes committed by Gbagbo
loyalists.
The president, an ally of western governments including the country’s former
colonial power, France, enjoys international support. Yet despite significant
economic growth, driven by its powerful agricultural sector, more than half of
the country lives in poverty, according to the World Bank.
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