Ivory Coast's Ouattara secures second term in landslide poll win Wednesday Oct 28,2015
Ivory Coast's Ouattara secures second term in landslide poll win
Ivory Coast's President Alassane Ouattara of the Rally of the
Houphouetists for Democracy and Peace (RHDP) party and his wife
Dominique prepare to cast their votes at a polling station during a
presidential election in Abidjan, Ivory Coast on Sunday October 25, 2015
Ivory Coast's
President Alassane Ouattara won a blowout poll victory and a second
five-year term in a weekend vote intended to draw a line under years of
turmoil and a 2011 civil war, the elections commission announced on
Wednesday Oct 28,2015
Ouattara
won a total of 2,118,229 votes, or 83.66 percent of ballots cast,
President of the Independent Electoral Commission (CEI) Youssouf
Bakayoko announced at a media conference. Sunday's vote had a turnout of
54.63 percent, he said.
The
former International Monetary Fund official, whose leadership has
helped the West African nation re-emerge as a rising economic star after
the 2011 civil war, faced a deeply divided opposition.
Ouattara
won the most votes in all but one of the 31 regions as well as the
largest city, Abidjan, and the capital, Yamoussoukro, results showed.
He won all but 16 votes in his home constituency of Kong, in Ivory Coast's north, where more than 14,000 voters cast ballots.
Sunday's
election was judged to be peaceful and transparent by observers, likely
reassuring investors who have flooded into the world's top cocoa
grower, drawn by growth around 9 percent over the past three years.
"I
would like to congratulate all Ivorians for their maturity and
exemplary behavior," Ouattara said late on Tuesday before the results
were announced.
"Ivory Coast is resolutely committed to the path of stability and the reinforcement of democracy."
Of
the six candidates seeking to unseat Ouattara, his closest challenger
was Pascal Affi N'Guessan, head of ex-president Laurent Gbagbo's Ivorian
Popular Front (FPI), who won 9.29 percent of votes.
The results announced by the CEI must now be validated by the constitutional court
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