KIGALI (Reuters) – Incumbent leader Paul Kagame has swept
to a landslide victory in Rwanda’s presidential election, results showed early
on Saturday, securing a third term in office and extending his 17 years in power.
Kagame has won
international plaudits for presiding over a peaceful and rapid economic
recovery in the Central African nation since the 1994 genocide, when an
estimated 800,000 people Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed.
But he has
also faced mounting censure for what critics and rights groups say are
widespread human rights abuses, a muzzling of independent media and suppression
of political opposition.
With 80
percent of votes counted from Friday’s election, the 59-year-old former
guerrilla leader had secured 98.66 percent, the National Electoral Commission’s
Executive secretary Charles Munyaneza told a news conference.
“We expect
that even if we get 100 percent of votes, there will not be any change,” he
said.
The full count
will be released at 1400 GMT on Saturday.
The board
expects turnout to have topped 90 percent in the East African country of 12
million people, in an election that fielded only a single opposition candidate,
Frank Habineza, and an independent.
Kagame said he
would work to sustain economic growth in the tiny nation.
“This is
another seven years to take care of issues that affect Rwandans and ensure that
we become real Rwandans who are (economically) developing,” he said in a speech
broadcast live on television.
Under his
rule, some dissidents were killed after fleeing abroad, in cases that remain
unsolved. The government denies any involvement.
Kagame, a
commander who led Tutsi rebel forces into Rwanda to end the 1994 genocide,
banned the use of tribal terms after becoming president.
He won the
last election in 2010 with 93 percent of the vote and had said during this
campaign for a further seven-year term that he again expected an outright
victory.
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