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Liberian presidential poll marred by boycott
by Jonathan Paye-Layleh and Rukmini Callimachi

The Associated Press    Translate This Article
8 November 2011

MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) - An election that was supposed to solidify peace in this nation emerging from war was marred by dismal turnout Tuesday, after the opposition went ahead with a boycott despite last-minute appeals from the United States and the United Nations Security Council.

The move guarantees re-election for the continent's first and only democratically elected female president, but election monitors and country experts worry that the low turnout could discredit Ellen Johnson Sirleaf's victory and delegitimize her government.

It's a worrying prospect in the Tennessee-sized nation of 3.9 million that experienced one of Africa's most horrific civil wars and where a fragile peace is held in place largely by the presence of 9,000 United Nations peacekeepers.

'In life, when you make up your mind, make it fully,' said Rahim Willie, who didn't cast his vote Tuesday in keeping with the boycott order issued by opposition leader Winston Tubman of the Congress for Democratic Change party, or CDC.

'We are Winston Tubman's followers,' he said. 'He and we believe the elections were flawed and we are staying away. Those who see reason to cast their votes today can do so. But as a CDC person, I can't.'

Tubman, the nephew of one of Liberia's longest-serving presidents and a former United Nations diplomat, dropped out of the race last week and called on his supporters to withhold their vote in protest. The United States called his allegations of fraud 'unsubstantiated' and State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland called his decision 'very disappointing.'

Lines were only a dozen or so people deep in many precincts in the capital, and an hour after polls opened, many of the polling booths had no lines at all. Poll workers at several precincts said that voter turnout was as low as 25 percent.

It was a sharp contrast to the first round of the election in October, when hundreds of people slept on the sidewalk overnight for a chance to be among the first to vote. Even as the skies opened and a torrential rain began, people stood in lines that snaked out the doors of polling stations, switchbacking across dirt courtyards and muddy fields.

Helicopters hovered overhead Tuesday and armored-personnel carriers patrolled the main boulevards, especially in the neighborhood where the opposition is headquartered. At least one person was killed and another four suffered bullet wounds after CDC supporters clashed with police on Monday, as they attempted to lead a march in support of the boycott.

The boycott won't stop Sirleaf from winning, but it could undercut her victory and her government since she is running unopposed.

Tubman said that the violence was further evidence that the vote should have been postponed, but most analysts say Tubman is boycotting not because of fears of fraud but because he knew he could not win.

'If you look at the figures, you can see that Tubman is almost certainly going to lose. He is 12, 13 points down in the polls,' said Stephen Ellis, the author of a history of the Liberian civil war and a researcher at the African Studies Center in the Netherlands.

'It's an obvious calculation. He withholds legitimacy from the government,' Ellis said. 'If it was felt by a large part of population to not be legitimate, in a place like Liberia, with its history, it becomes quite worrying.'

Those who did make a point of going out to vote appeared to be entirely pro-Sirleaf, who was first elected in 2005 and was just awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last month.

'It's about our future and our children's. Even if I don't want the government, it does not mean I can't vote,' said Kollie Kennedy, who was waiting her turn at a polling station inside a Pentecostal church. 'It's about Liberia.'

___

Callimachi contributed to this report from Dakar, Senegal. Associated Press photographer Rebecca Blackwell contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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