Liberia’s electoral authorities have begun investigating allegations of fraud filed by soccer star George Weah, as his rival, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, on Thursday consolidated her lead in the final round of the race for the presidency. With results in from almost 90 percent of polling stations across the West African nation, Sirleaf had 59.2 percent of the votes, an 18 point lead over Weah, and the prospect of becoming Africa’s first elected female president within her grasp. But Weah, who topped the first round on 11 October with an eight point margin, has claimed that the second-round ballot on Tuesday was not free and fair, and shown ballot papers that he said were tampered with. The National Elections Commission said it had received a formal complaint from Weah’s Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) party on Thursday. “I want them to intervene,” Weah told IRIN. Frances Johnson-Morris, the head of the commission, said an invesigation would begin immediately. "It's too soon to say the effect. Let's wait and see the magnitude of the complaint before we begin to see if it will affect the outcome,” she told a press conference. But at Weah’s party headquarters, scores of supporters were adamant about what would happen if the former AC Milan and Chelsea striker lost. “No Weah, no peace,” they chanted, jumping up and down as Weah pulled into the compound, fresh from meetings with UN officials and the Nigerian and Ghanaian ambassadors. “We want justice,” the crowd yelled. UN peacekeepers stepped up security outside the election body’s headquarters on Thursday, as rumours circulated on the streets about a possible demonstration by Weah’s supporters. “We will react robustly to any effort to disrupt the hard-won peace that this country now enjoys,” Alan Doss, the head of the UN mission in Liberia, told reporters.
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| On a street corner in Monrovia, people listen eagerly to their radios, anxious to know who has won the presidential run-off |
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