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Liberia: Provisional results for presidential election expected today

AP | Liberia’s provisional election results are expected Thursday, the election commission said Wednesday, as the West African nation waits to see who will succeed the Nobel Peace Prize winner who led the country’s recovery from Ebola and civil war.
A run-off election was widely expected with 20 candidates vying to replace Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa’s first female president.
The National Election Commission said local vote counting had ended after a largely smooth election. It apologized for delays in some areas and said it had quarantined materials from one precinct and will investigate reports of alleged compromised voting.
Former soccer star George Weah, Vice President Joseph Boakai, former rebel leader Prince Johnson and former Coca-Cola vice president Alexander Cummings were leading in various parts of the country, local media reported.
A presidential candidate must win more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a 2nd round. Final results should be known within 2 weeks. A run-off election, if needed, would come 2 weeks after that announcement.
Ready for Change
Observers said Tuesday’s vote went smoothly despite late starts in some counties. More than 2.1 million voters had registered to vote throughout Liberia.
Sirleaf will step aside after 2 six-year terms in office. She led the country’s recovery from a 14-year civil war and guided it through the Ebola crisis in 2014-15 that killed nearly 5,000 Liberians.
Voters commended her leadership but said they were ready for change.
The election turnout was impressive, especially among younger generations, said Christopher Fomunyoh of the National Democratic Institute, which was monitoring the elections.
“All of these people are saying they want change and improvement, and that explains why almost all of the candidates are presenting themselves as candidates for change,” Fomunyoh said.