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Ghana ballot delivers blow to ruling party
Fri Jan 2, 2009 7:40pm EST
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By Kwasi Kpodo
NSAWKAW, Ghana (Reuters) - Electors in the last constituency to vote in Ghana's presidential run-off delivered a further blow on Friday to the ruling party, which was already trailing narrowly in the election and boycotted the final ballot.
Opposition leader John Atta Mills and the ruling party's Nana Akufo-Addo are vying to succeed outgoing President John Kufuor as the West African country prepares to start producing crude oil in 2010.
The winner is due to be announced on Saturday after the Electoral Commission has examined appeals from both sides over alleged irregularities in last Sunday's run-off.
That vote was so close that Tain's 53,000 voters were left to decide the outcome, raising tensions over a vote seen as a chance to bolster Africa's battered democratic credentials after flawed and bloody polls in Zimbabwe and Kenya.
Before Friday's vote, Mills, of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), led with 50.13 percent of votes, ahead of Akufo-Addo, of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP), on 49.87 percent. Barely 23,000 votes separated the two candidates.
As expected, provisional results announced on Joy FM radio from Tain extended Mills's national lead after Akufo-Addo's NPP boycotted Friday's vote citing security concerns.
Mills picked up 19,566 votes compared to just 2,035 for Akufo-Addo, according to results announced by the district returning officer on Joy FM radio. The rural constituency, voted late due to problems which prevented it voting in last Sunday's run-off.
Even before the NPP boycott in Tain, Mills was favorite to win Friday's ballot, in a cocoa growing region, and to take the presidency after his NDC overturned the ruling NPP's majority in parliament in a simultaneous legislative election on December 7.
Mills led in Tain then, so Akufo-Addo would have required a huge swing in Tain to win the national vote.
Akufo-Addo has refused to concede defeat and the NPP has appealed results from other regions, citing irregularities.
But Electoral Commission chief Kwadwo Afari-Gyan told Reuters he would announce results on Saturday, leaving little time for any major revision of the results announced on Tuesday.
"I am declaring the results tomorrow at 11 a.m. (6 a.m. ET)" he said.
The Electoral Commission is considering appeals from both parties, which each accuse the other's supporters of violence and irregularities in Sunday's ballot. International and local monitors said voting was generally free and orderly.
HIGH-STAKES POLL
"It significantly raises the stakes, it significantly raises tensions ... (but) I'm not sure Ghana would necessarily descend into chaos or major instability. There is no historical precedent for that," said Rolake Akinola, analyst at consultancy Control Risks in London. Continued...
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