HomeAfricaCongo Republic's Sassou wins re-election with nearly 95% in tightly controlled vote

Congo Republic’s Sassou wins re-election with nearly 95% in tightly controlled vote

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BRAZZAVILLE, March 17 (Reuters) - Congo Republic ‌President Denis Sassou Nguesso has been re-elected with 94.82% of the ​vote, state television said on Tuesday, extending his nearly 42-year rule over the Central African oil producer.

Diplomats and political ⁠analysts had expected an easy victory for Sassou, 82, who faced six little‑known challengers in a race whose run‑up was tightly managed by the ruling Congolese Labour Party.

The main opposition ​parties opted not to field candidates, citing a lack of transparency, and two of the best-known opposition figures, General ‌Jean-Marie Michel Mokoko and Andre Okombi Salissa, have been in jail for nearly a decade.

Ahead of the vote, human rights activists were arrested, several opposition parties were suspended and public gatherings were ⁠closely monitored, said Congolese human rights activist Joe Washington Ebina.

Sunday's voting was ⁠marred by late openings at some polling stations and a nationwide internet blackout. 

State television on Tuesday reported turnout of 84.65%, though many polling stations in Brazzaville on election day had short or non-existent lines.

Sassou's closest challenger, Mabio Mavoungou Zinga, 69, a retired customs inspector and former member ‌of parliament, won 1.48% of the vote.

Defeated candidates have five days to file a challenge, and ⁠the Constitutional Court has 15 days to examine them before ‌publishing final results. 

NEW TERM MEANT TO BE SASSOU'S LAST

Sassou is ​a former paratrooper who took power in 1979. He lost Congo's first multi-party elections in 1992 but seized power again in 1997 after a civil war.

A constitutional change in 2015 scrapped ‌term limits and the presidential age cap, enabling him to ​run for three additional five‑year terms.

This latest ⁠term is meant to be his last, sharpening focus on succession within ‌the ruling party.

The economy, heavily dependent on oil, ⁠has stabilised in recent years after a decade-long downturn. Congo successfully completed a three-year IMF programme last year.

But over half the population lives in poverty, according to the World Bank, and many ​Congolese lack reliable access to ‌electricity, running water and basic healthcare.

Congo has also faced persistent allegations of corruption, with French and ⁠U.S. prosecutors investigating assets held abroad by members ​of Sassou's close family.

(Reporting by Congo Republic Newsroom; Writing by Clement Bonnerot; Editing by ​Bate Felix, Robbie Corey-Boulet and Ros Russell)

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