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Madagascar election: Hery Rajaonarimampianina wins Madagascar election: Hery Rajaonarimampianina wins
(about 2 hours later)
Madagascar's former finance minister Hery Rajaonarimampianina Rakotoarimanana has won the run-off presidential election, the electoral commission (CENIT) said on Friday, but his main rival claims the vote was rigged. Former finance minister Hery Rajaonarimampianina won Madagascar's first presidential election since a coup in 2009 but his closest rival said the vote was rigged, raising concerns the island could remain mired in political turmoil.
CENIT leader Beatrice Atallah said Rajaonarimampianina, the candidate backed by President Andry Rajoelina, who ousted his predecessor in a coup in 2009, won 53.5% of the 20 December vote. The electoral commission said on Friday that Rajaonarimampianina, the candidate backed by outgoing president Andry Rajoelina, who spearheaded the coup nearly five years ago, won 53.5% of the vote on 20 December.
He beat Jean Louis Robinson, who ended up with 46.5% but has demanded a recount. Robinson's camp has filed almost 300 complaints to the electoral court, which now has to rule on the result. He beat Jean Louis Robinson, who ended up with 46.5% and has demanded a recount. Robinson's camp has filed almost 300 complaints to the electoral court, which has to rule on the commission's provisional result by 19 January.
The poll, the first since Rajoelina grabbed power, is meant to end a crisis that has driven out investors, cut aid flows and sharply slowed the economy. Celebrations were muted in the capital, Antananarivo, where Rajaonarimampianina had struggled to win support in the first round.
A disputed result could prolong the malaise on the politically volatile Indian Ocean island and delay restoring the external budget support needed to drive public spending and boost anaemic growth. "I urge the Malagasy people to await the final result in complete serenity," Rajaonarimampianina told reporters.
Asked about the vote fraud allegations, he said: "It's [Robinson] who says that and not the people."
Robinson stayed away from the results declaration.
"We have said all along there was massive electoral fraud across Madagascar," said Elyse Razaka who helped run Robinson's campaign. "Robinson won't order people to take to the streets. But it is different if there is a spontaneous movement."
The poll is meant to end a crisis that has driven out investors, cut aid flows and sharply slowed the economy.
But a protracted dispute over the outcome would be likely to add fuel to the Indian Ocean island's already volatile political mix and delay restoring the external budget support needed to drive public spending and boost anaemic growth.
"The president-elect needs to be careful because there is a real risk of instability," said student Dina Faralahy. "The next administration will be fragile because it is hardly representative of the population if you look at turnout."
Just over half of the 7.9 million registered voters cast a ballot in the second round, the electoral commission said, reflecting a broad distrust of politicians that has deepened along with poverty levels in one of Africa's poorest states.
Madagascar also voted in a legislative poll on 20 December.
"I don't think the electoral court will change anything," said taxi driver Faniry Ravelomanana. "We have to turn a new page and await the results of the legislative elections."
Rajaonarimampianina's narrow margin of victory suggests there is all to play for in the parliamentary vote, raising the possibility of a French-style "cohabitation" in which the president and parliamentary majority come from different political camps.
That could paralyse policymaking, analysts say, doing little to restore confidence in Madagascar's mining and petroleum exploration industries.
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