U.S. embassy defends credibility of Liberia presidential poll

U.S. embassy defends credibility of Liberia presidential poll

by Joseph Anthony
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George Weah, former soccer player and presidential candidate of Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), is pictured at a church in Monrovia, Liberia October 8, 2017. Picture taken October 8, 2017. REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon

The U.S. embassy in Liberia on Wednesday defended the credibility of last monthโ€™s presidential election there, amid allegations of irregularities and fraud that have delayed a run-off poll.

First-round winner George Weah, a former international football star, was initially set to face the runner-up, Vice-President Joseph Boakai, last week to determine who will replace current term-limited President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

But the third-place finisher, Charles Brumskine, contested the outcome of the first round, claiming gross irregularities had occurred and accusing NEC officials of fraud, an allegation the body denies.

โ€œNo accredited Liberian, regional, or international observation group suggested that the cumulative anomalies observed reflect systemic issues sufficient to undermine the fundamental integrity of the electoral process,โ€ the U.S. embassy said in a statement.

Liberiaโ€™s Supreme Court ordered the elections commission to fully examine Brumskineโ€™s allegations last week, a decision likely to push back the run-off date by weeks and even creates the possibility of the first round being re-run.

A number of first-round candidates, including Boakai, have publicly backed Brumskineโ€™s challenge to the results and echoed his fraud allegations.

The dispute led Johnson Sirleaf, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, to state in a radio address following the Supreme Court decision that Liberiaโ€™s democracy was โ€œunder threatโ€, without elaborating.

โ€œEfforts by any actors to impede the expressed will of Liberiaโ€™s people for personal ambition could risk goodwill and future investments in Liberia by international partners,โ€ the U.S. statement warned.

Liberia, Africaโ€™s oldest modern republic, was founded by freed U.S. slaves in 1847, and maintains a special relationship with the United States.

The West African timber and rubber producer is still trying to heal the wounds of one of the continentโ€™s most brutal civil wars, which ended nearly 15 years ago. A successful vote would be its first democratic transfer of power in more than seven decades.

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