Cameroon’s President Paul
Biya has won a seventh term in office in polls marred by low turnout and voter
intimidation.
Mr Biya, at 85 sub-Saharan
Africa’s oldest leader, took 71.3% of the vote, according to official results.
Opposition calls for a
re-run of the presidential election were rejected by the Constitutional Council
last week.
BBC reports that riot
police were deployed on Sunday to the major cities of Yaoundé and Douala in
case of opposition protests.
Cameroon’s two
English-speaking provinces have been hit by more than a year of violent
protests and attacks by separatist rebels which have left hundreds dead.
Two days before results
were announced, Africa’s longest-serving President Teodoro Obiang Nguema of
neighbouring Equatorial Guinea congratulated Mr Biya on his win.
Mr Biya’s nearest
challenger, Maurice Kamto of the MRC/CRM, gained just 14.2%. Mr Biya took the
majority of votes in all but one of Cameroon’s 10 regions, losing out to Mr
Kamto by a small margin in the Littoral region which is home to the economic
capital, Douala.
Across the country, only
half of Cameroon’s voting-age population took part in the polls. Tens of
thousands of people were unable to cast their votes because of insecurity.
Threats of violence made
against would-be voters by rebels in the Anglophone regions reportedly deterred
many from casting their ballot. On election day, three separatists who were
accused of opening fire on passers-by were shot dead by security forces. Some
rebels also tried to disrupt the transporting of ballot boxes by calling for a
total ban on all travel.
Voter turnout in the
country’s two Anglophone regions was as low as 5%, according to the
International Crisis Group. Official figures give an almost 16% turnout in the
English-speaking South-West region.
Witnesses have told AFP
news agency they heard gunfire on Monday morning in Buea, the capital of the
English-speaking South-West region.
Cameroon’s electoral body
Elecam also reduced the overall number of polling stations across the
Anglophone North-West and South-West regions, and moved some others from
turbulent zones to more secure areas.
International Crisis Group
says voter turnout was as low as 5% in the country’s two Anglophone regions
Seats reserved for
opposition representatives at the constitutional council were left empty as the
results of the 7 October presidential election were read out, the BBC’s Randy
Joe Sa’ah reports from Yaoundé.
In the days before the
results were published 18 petitions calling for the election to be re-run were
lodged by opposition members, some alleging fraud, at the Constitutional Court,
the body responsible for announcing the results, before the results were
announced.
Among those calling for a
fresh vote were President Biya’s two main challengers – Mr Kamto and Joshua
Osih of the main opposition SDF/FSD.
Mr Kamto went as far as
declaring himself the winner of the polls despite producing no evidence to
prove this.
Election observers from the
African Union reported that the polls were “generally peaceful” but added that
“most parties were not represented” when it came to who was allowed to oversee
voting and ballot counts at polling stations.
The only other group to
send monitors was the International Organisation of La Francophonie (OIF),
whose head urged candidates and stakeholders to do their part in preserving
peace and use legal channels in any challenges to the results (in French).
False claims were made on
Cameroon’s state-owned television that Transparency International had deployed
international observers, forcing the Germany-based campaign group to issue a
statement denying them.
Cameroon’s parliamentary
and legislative elections were due to take place at the same time as the 7
October presidential elections but have been postponed to 2019.
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