}

Julius-Maada-Bio
Sierra Leoneans vote again today. Above Julius Maada Bio led Kamara narrowly in the first election

Sierra Leoneans are trooping to the polling stations again today to decide who should succeed President Ernest Bai Koroma, in a rescheduled run off election.

The two candidates are Julius Maada Bio, a former military head of state, and a former foreign affairs minister Samura Kamara, the torchbearer for the ruling party.

Maada Bio who leads the main opposition Sierra Leone Peopleโ€™s Party (SLPP) won the first round vote held on March 7.

Kamara of the ruling All Peopleโ€™s Congress (APC) will be looking to overturn Maada Bioโ€™s first round victory. Incidentally two candidates who came third and fourth refused to back the two frontrunners.

Meanwhile Sierra Leoneโ€™s National Electoral Commission (NEC) has reaffirmed its readiness to conduct the run-off without hitches.

The NEC Chairman, Mohamedย ย Conteh was quoted as making the assertion while speaking with ECOWAS Observation team in his office on Friday in Freetown.

In a statement by Mr Paul Ejime, a member of the Mission, Conteh said:โ€œat NEC we are prepared to deliver a credible election.

โ€œโ€ฉHe confirmed that polling materials both sensitive and non-sensitive, had been distributed to all the 16 Administrative Districts, except those in urban areas, which will be distributed hours before or on the Election Day.

Conteh added that the Commission was deploying some 63,000 permanent and ad-hoc staff across the 11,122 polling stations in 3,300 polling centres to serve the 3.17 million registered voters in the country with an estimated population of seven million.

The chairman said that the NEC has also met with officials of the two political parties contesting the presidential run-off, to agree on the modalities for counting of ballots, tallying and transmission of results from the district to regional and national levels.

This, according ย to him, is after ย the Commissionโ€™sย preventive diplomacy consultation facilitated by Heads of international observation missions.

โ€œTallying will take place at district level, certified by district officers with printouts given to political party agents.

โ€œThe certified results will then be transmitted to regional centres and then to the national office.

โ€œThe final national results will then be announced, according to districts.โ€

He commended Sierra Leoneans and political stakeholders for their patience, adding that the process was near completion.

The NEC chairman also said the tension between the Commission and the Sierra Leone Police (SLP), had been resolved with all sides agreeing that polling materials would be accompanied by police and security personnel.

He added that the two bodies also agreed that polling centres would also be manned by the security according to provisions of the electoral law.

He thanked ECOWAS, AU, EISA, Commonwealth, EU, UNDP and other development partners, and โ€œespecially our African brothers and sisters on observation missionsโ€ for their support.

On lessons learnt from the electoral process, the NEC Chair noted that given the countryโ€™s high illiteracy rate of about 60 per cent, there was the need for a robust voter education.

โ€œThere is also need for robust training of polling officials and incorporation of gender data political inclusivity for improvement in the future,โ€ he said. (NAN)


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