GHANA'S KEY OPPOSITION LEADER WINS
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ACCRA: Ghana's main opposition leader, Nana
Akufo-Addo, has won the country's presidential election with an absolute
majority over President John Mahama, the private radio stations Joy FM
and Citi FM said on Friday.
The two respected news stations based
their projections on results from Wednesday's election announced at the
constituency level. The electoral commission is set to begin releasing
results on Friday.
Joy FM's website showed Akufo-Addo winning
with 53 percent of the vote with Mahama on 45.15 per cent, based on a
count of 217 constituencies out of 275 in total. Citi FM gave Akufo-Addo
54.8 percent based on 190 constituencies.
Akufo-Addo, 72, served
as attorney general and then as foreign minister in the New Patriotic
Party government, which held power for eight years starting in 2001. It
is his third time running for president on the party ticket.
Mahama fought the election against the backdrop of an economy that has slowed since
he took power in 2013, in part because of lower global prices for the
West African country's exports of gold, oil and cocoa.
Ghana's
two strong parties regularly hold peaceful and highly competitive
elections. Twice since 2000, the government of the day has been
overturned. |
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