Ex-football
star George Weah takes early lead
Partial
results from Liberia's presidential election show former football star George
Weah has taken an early lead. Figures from the National Elections Commission
(NEC) put Mr Weah ahead in 11 out of 15 counties, although most votes have yet
to be counted.
His main rival, incumbent
Vice-President Joseph Boakai, leads in one county and is second in most others.
A candidate needs more than 50%
of the votes for outright victory.
If no-one achieves that, a
second round will be held in November.
The election is to choose a
successor to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf - Africa's first elected female president
and a Nobel Peace laureate.
As the results came in, the
manager of Arsenal Football Club, Arsene Wenger, was apparently duped by false
reports that Mr Weah had won.
"I would like to
congratulate one of my former players, who became president of Liberia,"
Mr Wenger told reporters.
"It's not often you have a
former player who becomes president of a country. So well done, Georgie."
NEC Chairman Jerome Korkoya hit
out at false reports and said his officials were doing their best to get
accurate official results out as quickly as possible.
"This commission has not
declared any winner," he stressed.
International election observers
said they had not identified any major problems with Tuesday's voting.
However, parties supporting
three of the 20 candidates have alleged irregularities and said they would
contest the result, Reuters reported.
Ms Sirleaf, 78, who is stepping
down at the end of two terms, hailed the election as a success.
"We believe that all
Liberians are ready for this process. I thank them for participating in this
process," she said.
Meet the
frontrunners
George Weah,
51:
• Former Fifa World Footballer of the
Year
• Arsene Wenger, now at Arsenal, was
Weah's coach at Monaco in 1990s
• Has the political backing of jailed
warlord and former President Charles Taylor
• Taylor's ex-wife, Jewel Howard
Taylor, is his running mate.
Joseph
Boakai, 73:
• Nicknamed "Sleepy Joe"
• Denies it is because he is often
caught napping at public events, says it is because he is a dreamer
• Vice-President under Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf since 2005
• Has distanced himself from her
record, saying "a lot more needs to be achieved".
Liberia, which was founded by
freed US slaves in the 19th Century, has not had a smooth transfer of power in
73 years.
Ms Sirleaf took office in 2006,
after her predecessor, Charles Taylor, was forced out of office by rebels in
2003, ending a long civil war.
Taylor is
currently serving a 50-year prison sen tence
in the UK for war crimes related to the conflict in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
Mr Weah, 51, has chosen Taylor's
ex-wife Jewel Howard Taylor as his running mate.
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