Yahoo – AFP,
Stephanie Findlay and Stacey Knott, December 10, 2016
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| President and candidate of Ghana's ruling National Democratic Congress party John Mahama leaves after voting in the Bole district, northern region, on December 7, 2016 (AFP Photo/Pius Utomi Ekpei) |
Accra (AFP)
- Challenger Nana Akufo-Addo won Ghana's national election on Friday, tapping
into an electorate fed up with a sputtering economy and ready for change.
The erudite
72-year-old human rights lawyer cruised to victory winning 53.8 percent of the
votes, according to the country's election agency.
"I
will not let you down. I will do all in my power to live up to your hopes and
expectations," Akufo-Addo said to an ecstatic crowd at his house in the
country's capital of Accra.
"I
will do my best to serve your interests and put our country back on the path of
progress and prosperity."
Incumbent
John Mahama conceded defeat in the evening two days after a hotly contested
race that was seen as a test of the country's democracy in a region plagued by
dictators and coups.
Mahama
called to congratulate opposition leader Akufo-Addo, whose New Patriotic Party
(NPP) supporters had been gathering for hours outside his house after local
media gave him a clear lead following the Wednesday vote.
"Yes
he has conceded defeat," George Lawson of Mahama's New Democratic Congress
(NDC) party told AFP.
Akufo-Addo
had campaigned on a platform promising to boost growth and deliver jobs.
"The
president of Ghana is president for every single Ghanaian," Akufo-Addo
said, as fireworks popped overhead and thousands of people cheered in the
streets outside his house.
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Socio-economic
factfile on Ghana (AFP Photo)
|
'Gold
standard'
Akufo-Addo's
supporters — almost all in head-to-toe white, a symbol of victory — had been
dancing on his lawn for hours in anticipation of his victory speech.
At one
point, they broke out in an enthusiastic a cappella rendition of Ghana's
national anthem.
"We
have won," said Hajia Mustafa, a 44-year-old trader, flashing a wide
smile, "I have my president, I have my choice."
The
high-stakes race between Akufo-Addo and Mahama has been seen as a litmus test
of the stability for one of Africa's most secure democracies.
But fears
of widespread violence erupting during the election never materialised, with a
generally peaceful voting day followed by calm as the official results trickled
in.
"I
think Ghanaians should be extraordinarily proud of themselves," said
Ambassador Johnnie Carson of the National Democratic Institute, an election
observer.
"Ghana
has distinguished itself in the last two and a half decades with integrity and
transparency," Carson said.
"It is
a gold standard for democracy in Africa."
'Escaped
violence'
Yet while
the European Union Election Observation Mission said that Ghana "largely
escaped the violence many had feared" it pointed to other areas of
concern.
"The
misuse of incumbency, including unequal access to state media, and
unaccountable campaign financing were areas Ghana could address in the
future," said the mission in a statement.
Akufo-Addo
will serve a four-year term in the former British colony, a once booming
country that has seen its economy slow, currency deteriorate and inflation
soar.
Mahama, who
came to power in 2012 after beating Akufo-Addo, had urged voters to "stay
the course", promising to deliver more infrastructure projects.
In his third
bid for the top job, Akufo-Addo blasted Ghana's poor economic growth rate --
estimated at 3.3 percent in 2016, the lowest rate for two decades -- and laid
out a radical vision to transform the country's economy.
Akufo-Addo
had also warned his supporters that "vigilance is key" at the polls
in an attempt to avoid a repeat of the 2012 vote -- narrowly won by Mahama with
50.7 percent -- that he contested unsuccessfully in the country's Supreme
Court.
Ghana is
the world's second biggest producer of cocoa after Ivory Coast and Africa's
second biggest gold producer after South Africa.
But it was
forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2015 for a bailout
as global commodity prices tanked.



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