Rwandan President Paul
Kagame is on course to extend his 24-year rule by another five years in a
landslide victory, with most of the votes counted from Monday's election.
He has 99.15% of the
vote so far, with about 79% of ballots counted, partial results announced by
the electoral commission show.
The 66-year-old again
faced no meaningful opposition, with leading figures banned. His two opponents
shared less than 1% of the vote.
Mr Kagame thanked
Rwandans for their trust in an address at his Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)
party headquarters.
“These are not just
figures, even if it was 100%, these are not just numbers. [They] show the
trust, and that is what is most important," Mr Kagame said.
His opponents -
environmentalist Frank Habineza and journalist and author Philippe Mpayimana -
have 0.53% and 0.32% respectively.
The full provisional results are due by 20
July and final ones by 27 July.
The results come as no
surprise.
They mirror the 2017
election's outcome that had the same candidates taking part - which Mr Kagame
won with 98.8% of the vote.
At least three
aspirants were disqualified from running, including Diane
Rwigara, an outspoken critic of Mr Kagame.
The electoral
commission says 98% of the more than 9.5 million eligible voters took part in
the elections.
They were voting for a
president and 53 legislators.
Elections for 27
special seats meant for women, young people and people with disabilities will
take place on Tuesday.
Mr Kagame has been the
de-facto leader of Rwanda since the end of the 1994 genocide and president
since 2000.
Rights groups accuse him of curtailing freedoms since taking office, while his supporters say he had presided over economic growth and helped end ethnic divisions.
Source: BBC
Follow the African Elections Project on Facebook and Twitter @Africanelection for more updates.
https://www.bbc.com/