21. January 2015

Voters not deterred by heavy rains

Polling opened yesterday in Zambia's tightly contested vote to elect a president after a ruling party power struggle following the death of Michael Sata in office last year.
The two top contenders are defence minister Edgar Lungu ( 58) representing the ruling Patriotic Front (PF), and opposition candidate Hakainde Hichilema (52) of the United Party for National Development (UPND).

At stake are the remaining year and a half of Sata's five-year term in Africa's second biggest copper producer, where new taxes on the metal have become a surprising election issue.

Lungu's party introduced the tax in January, while Hichilema has promised to scrap it, pledging a business-friendly Zambia.

The rivals - Lungu the lawyer and Hichilema the businessman, affectionately know as HH - drew huge crowds at last-minute rallies.

But in the absence of opinion polls analysts hedged their bets.

“It's a two-horse race,” said Oliver Saasa, CEO of Premier Consult, a business and economic consultancy firm. “It's quite clear this is a very closely run race.”

Election-weary Zambians, who voted in scheduled elections that brought Sata to power three years ago and are also due to cast ballots next year, formed long queues despite early morning cold weather. In Lusaka's Kanyama working class suburb, excited voters applauded and ululated when a presiding officer declared the crowded polling station open.

“My vote is going to make a difference, we are going to remove this ...(PF) family,” said 55-year-old vegetable vendor Matron Siyasiya. “They can claim all the good work, but God's favour is on my candidate, and that is HH.”

But Grace Nyirongo, who runs a take-away business said she was satisfied with the government and echoed the ruling PF's campaign slogan of continuity.

“We want the government to continue with the projects started by Sata. Frankly there's no need to start afresh,” said Nyirongo.

Shortly after the polls opened it began raining heavily in Lusaka, but that did not deter the voters.

Standing in rain-drenched clothes on muddy ground, with no umbrella or raincoat, PF supporter Allan Kabwe's spirits could not dampened.

“I know many people will be discouraged, but after I finished voting, I am going door-to-door to encourage people to come and vote. We have to put Edgar into state house,” said the 24-year-old street vendor. Analyst Neo Simutanyi of think-tank Centre for Policy Dialogue said: “We can safely conclude that the opposition will win this election, but I don't think the margin will be very wide.”

Hichilema's camp is seen to have received a boost from the infighting within another major opposition party, the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), whose candidate Nevers Mumba is given little chance.

With ideological differences between Zambia's political parties difficult to pin down, voting patterns are often determined by personalities and ethnicity rather than issues.

Despite growth-oriented policies and a stable economy over the past few years, at least 60 percent of Zambia's population of about 15 million lives below the poverty line, according to World Bank figures. About 5.2 million people are eligible to cast ballots. Polling opened at 06h00 and is due to close 12 hours later across 6 000 polling stations.

Whoever is elected will serve out the remaining 19 months of Sata's term. (The Namibian, Windhoek)

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