PC: Sia Kambou
Mauritanian President
Mohamed ould Ghazouani has been re-elected as head of state following
Saturday's national vote, provisional results show.
The electoral
commission website shows he took over 56% of the vote, beating six opposition
candidates.
In second position was
anti-slavery activist Biram Dah Abeid with 22%, while Hamadi Sidi el-Mokhtar of
the Islamist Tewassoul party came third with 13%.
Analysts had expected
him to win the election in the first round.
The president, a
former army chief, is credited with establishing stability since his first
election five years ago, after decades of political unrest and frequent coups.
He has been allies
with Western partners such as France and the US, but has also kept ties with
junta-led neighbours including Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, which have pivoted
towards Russia in recent years.
Mauritania has largely
avoided the Islamist insurgencies affecting neighbouring Sahel states.
On Sunday, Mr Abeid
said he would not recognise the results, calling it an “electoral coup”.
"We'll not accept
these results from the so-called independent electoral commission. We'll use
our own electoral commission to proclaim the results," the AFP news agency
quoted him as telling journalists.
Mr Abeid, whose
grandparents were slaves and has spent much of his life campaigning against the
practice in the country, was vying for presidency for the third time.
He emerged second in
the 2019 elections also won by Mr Ghazouani.
He and other
opposition candidates alleged irregularities in that election, which led to
small-scale protests.
Before this year’s
election, the third-place candidate, Mr Mokhtar, warned that his party would
not accept the results if it suspected rigging, the AFP news agency reports.
The turnout for the
election was about 55%, according to the electoral website.
Source: BBC
Follow the African
Elections Project on Facebook and Twitter @Africanelection for more updates.
https://www.bbc.com/