Opposition candidate, Adama Barrow, is in the lead
after almost 75 per cent of votes had been counted in Gambian presidential
voting, threatening President Yahya Jammeh’s 22-year-rule, the electoral
commission said on Friday.
Mr. Barrow, who has the support of seven political
parties, has won 22 out of 53 constituencies or 138,148 votes in Thursday’s
presidential polls. According to the commission, incumbent Mr. Jammeh won 14
out of 53 constituencies or 126,587 votes.
Report says the election is won by a simple majority
in the poverty-stricken West African nation, which largely relies on peanut
exports for trade income. Gambians on Thursday voted amid a shutdown of all
internet and telephone lines, which raised fears of Mr. Jammeh planning to
hijack the election.
Meanwhile, the lines were expected to remain
disconnected until Sunday. Mr. Jammeh, a former army colonel who came to power
during a 1994 military coup, has been ruling the Islamic Republic with an iron
fist. He is running for a fifth five-year term against two other candidates. The
two candidates are Mr. Barrow, a businessman popular with the country’s largely
unemployed youth and Mama Kandeh, the leader of the Gambia Democratic Congress,
the only opposition party that did not join forces with Mr. Barrow. Ironically,
all three candidates were born in the same year, 1965. However, the capital,
Banjul, remained calm on Friday, in spite of a heavy security force presence.
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