Sierra Leone’s President Julius Maada Bio looked on course for re-election on Monday after the electoral commission said he had a clear lead with 60 percent of the votes counted, a process which is being contested by the opposition.
Bio had garnered 55.86 percent of ballots cast, more than the 55 percent required for victory after Saturday’s first round of voting.
The incumbent’s 1,067,666 votes put him well ahead of his main rival Samura Kamara, who had 793,751 votes or 41.53 percent, the commission said.
Final results were expected within 48 hours, said election commission chief Mohamed Kenewui Konneh.
The tally is already being disputed by the opposition All People’s Congress (APC), which denounced in a statement Monday the electoral commission’s lack of inclusiveness, transparency, and responsibility.
The party pointed to the lack of information about which polling stations or districts the ballots were coming from.
“We totally reject the chief Electoral Commissioner’s announcement of such cooked-up figures,” Kamara’s APC said.
During a Monday evening press conference, European Union observers said they felt a lack of transparency and communication by the electoral authority had led to mistrust in the electoral process.
They said they received reports of violent incidents in six regions and witnessed violence first-hand at seven polling stations during voting hours and at three others during the closing and counting stages.
Some 3.4 million people were registered to vote in Saturday’s election.
Twelve men and one woman stood for president, but Bio’s main challenger was Kamara of the APC.
Bio, of the Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP), narrowly beat Kamara in a runoff in 2018.
The president, 59, a former coup leader in the 1990s, has championed education and women’s rights in his first civilian term.
Kamara, 72, a former foreign and finance minister, is facing a protracted trial over allegations that he misappropriated public funds as foreign minister, a case he says is politically motivated.
While calm returned to the country Monday, EU observers denounced the violent response by security forces at the APC headquarters in Freetown on Sunday night, made in an effort to disperse opposition supporters, which left one woman dead.
An APC spokesman said the woman was one of the party’s supporters.
“She was on the ground floor in the medical unit. She is a nurse. We have a small dispensary in our headquarters where she worked,” the spokesman said.
The woman’s 25-year-old son, Ibrahim Conteh, told AFP that he had identified his mother’s body at the morgue.
“I need justice. I just want to know” who killed my mother, he told AFP in tears.
Police did not confirm the death, while saying they had fired tear gas canisters “to disperse the crowd which was disturbing people on the road”.
Abu Bakar Kargbo, 42, a member of a UK-based opposition party, told AFP the incident was “like a horror film”.
“After a while, we realised that live rounds were being fired,” he said. “It was terrifying… It was like the end of the world.”
AFP reporters saw blood and bullet holes inside the APC headquarters early Monday.
Hannah, a party secretary who did not want to give her last name, returned early Monday morning to collect her bag and belongings which she had left the previous night.
“People were dancing and celebrating outside. They were happy. All of a sudden, I heard shots and tear gas,” she told AFP, her voice hoarse.