Liberia to vote in delayed run-off for new president

Liberians choose a new leader Tuesday in a run-off between Vice President Joseph Boakai and footballing icon George Weah, a vote that will mark the country's first democratic transition since 1944.


After seven weeks of delays caused by legal complaints lodged by Boakai’s ruling Unity Party against the electoral commission, polling stations are due to open at 8:00 am (0800 GMT) and close at 6:00 pm for Liberia’s 2.1 million registered voters.

Weah’s Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC) has urged voters not to drink too much on Christmas Day and to get up early on the 26th to cast their ballots in what National Elections Commission (NEC) chairman Francis Korkoya has said is “one sacrifice for the good of our democracy and country.”

They will choose a successor to President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who is due to step down in January after 12 years at the helm, resurrecting the West African nation from the ashes of civil war (1989-2003) and overseeing the response to the Ebola crisis (2014-16).

In the first round of voting on October 10, Weah topped the poll with 38.4 percent while Boakai came second with 28.8 percent, triggering a run-off as neither made it past the 50 percent needed to win outright.

“It’s too close to call,” said Ibrahim Al-Bakri Nyei, a Liberian political analyst at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), saying Weah was in a similar position to 2005 when he lost despite widespread predictions of victory.

Given the date of the vote, “it’s likely to have a lower turnout than the first one,” he predicted.

– Long road to run-off –

Praising a violence-free electoral process, Sirleaf said in a recent speech that “the ballot box has replaced bullets and electoral disputes are settled through the courts”.

Boakai’s Unity Party joined forces with the opposition Liberty Party to challenge what he said were “massive irregularities and fraud” in the results, but the Supreme Court found the allegations could not be proved, and observers had declared the vote credible.

A final attempt to stay the vote and hand responsibility for a new date to parliament was dismissed Thursday by the country’s top court.

Meanwhile horse-trading for the support of the 18 unlucky presidential candidates in the first round has resulted in few certainties save for Weah’s endorsement by warlord-turned-preacher Prince Johnson, who is extremely popular in the populous county of Nimba.

Ex-footballer Weah was also pictured at a public event with Sirleaf on Thursday, heightening speculation that she will endorse him over the vice president she served with for 12 years.

Weah has also polled well in Bong county, the fiefdom of Liberian warlord and former president Charles Taylor and his ex-wife, Jewel Howard-Taylor, who is the former footballer’s vice-presidential pick.

Charles Taylor is currently serving a 50-year sentence in Britain for war crimes committed in neighbouring Sierra Leone, but his presence has loomed over the election.

– Challenging economy –

As Liberia’s most famous son, Weah attracts huge crowds and has a faithful youth following in a country where a fifth of the electorate is aged 18 to 22, but he is criticised for issuing vague promises and for his long absences from the nation.

Weah held a boisterous final rally in Monrovia on Saturday.

“You know I’ve been in competitions –- tough ones too and I came out victorious. So I know Boakai cannot defeat me,” Weah said. “I have the people on my side.”

While ordinary Liberians are grateful peace has held through Sirleaf’s two terms in office, living standards remain dire for most and have become the focus of the campaign, giving Boakai a difficult path to tread after serving at her side.

He faces accusations the government did too little on corruption and focussed on seeking donor funds rather than tackling issues at home.

Nonetheless, Boakai said Sunday he was “very, very confident” of winning, adding: “Victory is mine”.

Whoever wins the vote faces an economy battered by slumped commodity prices for its main exports rubber and iron ore, and a rapidly depreciating currency.

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