Monday, December 02, 2024 | Jumada al-ula 29, 1446 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
24°C / 24°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Rwanda votes as Kagame expected to extend rule

Incumbent President of Rwanda and Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) presidential candidate Paul Kagame casts his ballot, in Kigali. — AFP
Incumbent President of Rwanda and Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) presidential candidate Paul Kagame casts his ballot, in Kigali. — AFP
minus
plus

KIGALI: Millions of Rwandans were voting in presidential and parliamentary elections on Monday, with the African nation's leader Paul Kagame widely expected to cruise to victory and extend his iron-fisted rule for another five years.


Rwanda's leader since the end of the 1994 genocide and president since 2000, Kagame faces only two challengers after several prominent critics were barred from standing.


The lineup is a carbon copy of the last election in 2017, when Kagame obliterated his rivals with almost 99 percent of the vote, and there is little doubt about the outcome this year.


Frank Habineza, leader of the Democratic Green Party, and independent Philippe Mpayimana were the only two candidates approved to run against Kagame out of eight applicants.


With 65 percent of the population aged under 30, Kagame -- who is running for a fourth term -- is the only leader most Rwandans have ever known.


The 66-year-old is credited with rebuilding a traumatised nation after Hutu extremists unleashed a genocide targeting Tutsis. The perpetrators killed around 800,000 people, mainly Tutsis but also Hutu moderates.


However, rights groups accused his regime of stifling the media and political opposition with arbitrary detentions, killings and forced disappearances.


Abroad, it faces allegations of stoking instability in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo, where a UN report says Rwandan troops are fighting alongside M23 rebels in the troubled east.


Kigali was also accused of killing tens of thousands of Hutus in the DRC during its pursuit of fleeing genocide perpetrators.


Discussion of these alleged massacres remains taboo and is considered genocide "revisionism" in Rwanda.


More than nine million Rwandans are registered to cast their ballot across 2,433 polling stations, with the presidential race being held at the same time as legislative elections for the first time.


Kagame won with more than 93 percent of the vote in 2003, 2010 and 2017 -- scoring 98.79 percent in the most recent election, compared with just 0.48 percent for Habineza and 0.73 percent for Mpayimana. He has overseen controversial constitutional amendments that shortened presidential terms from seven to five years and reset the clock for the Rwandan leader, allowing him to potentially rule until 2034. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon