Alassane Ouattara was re-elected as president of Ivory Coast, official results showed on Wednesday, in a vote seen as key to cementing peace in the west African country after years of violence and upheaval.
The 73-year-old incumbent won the election outright by garnering almost 84% of ballots in the first round of polls Sunday, which saw 54.63% of voters turn out despite calls for a boycott by some opposition candidates.
He won a total of 2,118,229 votes, or 83.66% of votes cast, the commission said. Turnout was 54.63%. Several opposition candidates pulled out of the campaign, complaining that it was not free and fair. The last vote in 2010 was bitterly contested and resulted in a civil war in which 3,000 people lost their lives.
Ouattara required more than 50% of the vote to avoid a run-off. His closest opposition rival, Pascal Affi N'Guessan, got just 9%. In the 2010 vote Ouattara defeated then-President Laurent Gbagbo, whose refusal to step down triggered months of violence in which thousands of people were killed.
Ouattara's campaign this year centred around his economic programme. Critics accused him of failing to foster reconciliation or reduce poverty. The 54% turnout was down from the 2010 first-round turnout of about 80%.
Source: QNA
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