Polls open in Namibia elections
Polls
have opened in parliamentary and presidential elections in the southern
African nation of Namibia, expected to deliver a comfortable win for
the ruling party, which has been in power since independence in 1990.
About 1.2
million Namibians, about half the population, were eligible to vote in
Friday’s elections at several thousand polling stations, which are using
electronic voting machines instead of the old ballot paper system.
Sixteen
political parties and nine presidential candidates were the race; final
results were expected within 24 hours of the 9pm local time (1900 GMT)
close of voting.
The
presidential candidate of the ruling SWAPO party is Hage Geingob, the
incumbent prime minister, who campaigned for independence decades ago at
the UN.
If elected, he would succeed President Hifikepunye Pohamba, who is stepping down after serving two five-year terms.
Namibia
enjoys political stability and benefits from major diamond and uranium
reserves as well as revenue from tourists drawn to its stark landscapes.
Geingob has acknowledged Namibia still has high poverty and lacks adequate health facilities.
Geingob would be the first president from the ethnic Damara minority.
Pohamba, the current president, belongs to the Ovambo, the biggest ethnic group in Namibia.
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