Madagascans vote in presidential showdown

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A woman casts her ballot at a polling station in Antananarivo during the second round of the presidential election. — AFP photo

ANTANANARIVO: Madagascans voted yesterday in a run-off election between two rivals who have waited years to come face-to-face in a fiercely personal battle for power in the Indian Ocean island.

The clash between Andry Rajoelina and Marc Ravalomanana could spark fresh instability in the impoverished country if the result is rejected by the losing candidate or fraud allegations are widespread, analysts warn.

The contenders came a close first and second in November’s first round.

Rajoelina and Ravalomanana were both banned from running in the 2013 ballot as part of an agreement to end recurring crises that have rocked Madagascar since independence from France in 1960.

“I am confident,” Rajoelina said after voting in the capital Antananarivo.

“I think that the Madagascan people will decide once and for all who will lead the country..I call for people to vote in massive numbers.”

As Ravalomanana left a polling station in the city, he said: “With the participation of all Madagascans, I hope we will change Madagascar and we will move forward.”

In the first round, Rajoelina won 39 per cent compared with 35 per cent for Ravalomanana.

Both camps alleged they were victims of fraud and cheating, and the election count could be tense with the first significant results due only by next week.

Ravalomanana, 69, was first elected as president in 2002 but was forced to resign seven years later by violent demonstrations supported by Rajoelina, the then mayor of the capital Antananarivo.

Rajoelina, 44, was installed by the army and ruled until 2014.

About 45 per cent of the 10 million registered voters abstained in the first round, and the two surviving contenders criss-crossed the country via helicopter as they pulled out all the stops to secure votes.

Both candidates have spent lavishly on campaigning, with promises and handouts distributed liberally to voters who are among the poorest in Africa.

With the personalities of the two men dominating the election, issues such as poverty, corruption and lack of basic services and infrastructure have been largely pushed to one side.

Some analysts warn the election fall-out could damage the chances of future development.

“The results could be very tight and, in this context, even small irregularities could lead one or the other candidate to contest them,” said Marcus Schneider, an analyst at the Bonn-based Friedrich Ebert Foundation.

Madagascar is well known for its vanilla and precious redwood, yet is one of the world’s poorest nations, according to World Bank data, with 76 per cent of people living in extreme poverty.

The island, which is also famed for its unique wildlife, is heavily dependent on foreign aid and been burdened by a long history of coups and unrest. — AFP