PC: @RwandainKorea/Twitter
Rwandans are voting
Monday in a presidential election that is expected
to extend the long rule of President Paul Kagame, who has held power
since 1994.
Some voters in the
capital Kigali arrived arrived as early as 5 a.m. and waited for polls to open.
There were long lines at some polling stations.
“This is going to be
my first time to vote. I am voting for President Kagame because I have never
seen a leader like him before,” said passenger motorcyclist Jean Claude
Nkurunziza.
Election authorities
say 9.5 million Rwandans are registered to vote in the population of 14
million. Provisional results are expected later on Monday.
The outcome will
almost certainly be in favor of Kagame, an authoritarian leader who is running
virtually unopposed.
His opponents are
Frank Habineza of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda and independent
candidate Philippe Mpayimana, both of whom struggled to attract supporters
during campaigns.
Kagame faced the same
opponents in 2017, when he took nearly 99%
of the vote.
Habineza told the AP
Monday that his party "has improved and we are confident we will perform
very well this time."
Kagame, 66, has been
in charge of the small eastern African country since he seized power as the
leader of rebels who took control of Rwanda’s government and ended the genocide
in 1994.
He was Rwanda’s vice
president and de facto leader from 1994 to 2000, when he first became
president. He is condemned by many as a violent authoritarian while praised by
others for presiding over impressive growth in the three decades since the
genocide.
Kagame is among some
African leaders who have prolonged their rule by pursuing changes to term
limits. In 2015, Rwandans in a referendum voted to lift a two-term limit. Now
Kagame could stay in power until 2034.
Kagame told reporters
Saturday that his mandate comes from the people.
"The ruling party
and Rwandans have been asking me to stand for another mandate," he said.
”At a personal level, I can comfortably go home and rest.”
Rwanda’s election
takes place amid heightened fears of insecurity in Africa’s Great Lakes region.
A violent group of rebels known as M23 is fighting Congolese forces in a remote
area of eastern Congo.
Between
3,000 and 4,000 Rwandan forces are fighting alongside M23, U.N.
experts said in a report circulated last week. The U.S. government has
described the group as being backed by Rwanda. Rwanda accuses Congo’s military
of recruiting fighters who were among the perpetrators of the 1994 genocide.
Rights groups continue
to raise alarm over harsh restrictions on human rights, including freedom of
association, in Rwanda.
Amnesty International
expressed concerns in a recent statement over “threats, arbitrary detention,
prosecution on trumped-up charges, killings and enforced disappearances”
targeting the political opposition in Rwanda.
That statement said the suppression of dissenting voices, including among civic groups and the press, “has a chilling effect and limits the space for debate for people of Rwanda.”
Follow the African Elections Project on Facebook and Twitter @Africanelection for more updates.
Africanelections.org