Namibians queue at a voting station near Windhoek during the November 2009 elections. |
WINDHOEK, Namibia
Namibians voted on Wednesday in what was expected to be the toughest
contest yet for the party that has ruled for three decades of independence, an
election it was still expected to win despite a brutal economic crisis.
President Hage Geingob, Namibia’s
third leader since the sparsely populated and mostly arid country freed itself
from the shackles of apartheid South Africa in 1990, is seeking a second and
final term from 1.3 million registered voters.
He faces nine challengers including
Panduleni Itula, a dentist-turned-politician who is a member of the ruling
SWAPO party but is running as an independent. Itula is popular with young people,
nearly half of whom are unemployed.
Concurrent legislative polls will
elect 96 members of parliament, testing SWAPO’s 77-seat majority. Polls opened
at 7 a.m. (0500 GMT) and close at 9 p.m. (1900 GMT).
Results are expected within 48 hours.
A sputtering economy, one of
Namibia’s worst-ever droughts and the biggest corruption scandal in its history
have conspired to make this election unexpectedly tough for Geingob, who won by
87% last time.
Independent presidential candidate Panduleni Itula at Hakahana sports field during the launch of his manifesto |
The Bank of Namibia expects the
domestic economy to contract for a third year in 2019, by 1.7%.
A scandal in which two ministers were
alleged to have conspired to dole out fishing licenses to Iceland’s biggest
fishing firm, Samherji, in return for kickbacks has also taken the shine off
the ruling party.
Whether the result is close or not, a
SWAPO win is likely to be controversial, especially since the court threw out a
case mounted by the opposition against the use of electronic voting machines it
fears will be used to cheat.
The military said in a statement it
was on high alert for violence, which Namibia has avoided in previous polls. -
Africa
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