Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Jihadist threats kept many polling places shut in Mali election

Jihadist threats kept many polling places shut in Mali election
Election workers start the counting of the ballots during a run-off presidential election in Bamako, Mali August 12, 2018. REUTERS/Luc Gnago Copyright  LUC GNAGO(Reuters)
Copyright LUC GNAGO(Reuters)
By Reuters
Published on
Share this article Comments
Share this article Close Button

BAMAKO (Reuters) - Threats by jihadist militants forced hundreds of polling stations in Mali to stay closed during Sunday's presidential run-off, the government said on Monday.

The 490 polling stations that failed to open were about two percent of the total. In last month's first round, 644 were unable to operate. Security fears severely dampened the turnout, which a civil society group estimated at only 22 percent.

The vote pitted President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita against opposition leader Soumaila Cisse after an inconclusive first round in which Keita won about 41 percent of the vote. Official second-round results are not expected for a few days.

Mali is high on the list of Western powers' security concerns due to the presence of militant groups with links to al Qaeda and Islamic State. A successful election is seen as important in the effort to restore stability.

Most of the shuttered polling stations were in the northern Timbuktu region, where armed men killed the chairman of one electoral office, and the central Mopti region, Security Minister Salif Traore told reporters on Monday.

In 2013 French troops pushed Islamist militants out of areas they had seized in the desert north, but they have since regrouped and routinely attack civilians, Malian soldiers and U.N. peacekeepers.

(Reporting by Media Coulibaly; Writing by Aaron Ross; Editing by Andrew Roche)

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share this article Comments

Read more

Libya announces probe after Russian-made rocket hits near UN mission in Janzour

Sweeping victory for Venezuela's ruling party in elections boycotted by opposition

Conservative President Noboa secures re-election in Ecuador