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Country goes to the polls

[MALAWI] Voting station in 2004 presidential election. IRIN
Malawians going to the polls on Thursday
Malawi's general elections got off to a peaceful start on Thursday, as voters turned out to choose a new president and 191 members of parliament. At some voting stations in the capital, Lilongwe, people had begun queuing by 4.00 am - two hours before the centres opened. Some confusion was reported at polling stations where people's photographs had not appeared alongside their names in the voters' register, but "if their names are there, and they have certificates with them, they are allowed to vote," said Martha Jussam, a Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) monitor in the capital. The ruling United Democratic Front (UDF) deputy publicity secretary, Mary Kaphwereza-Banda, told IRIN she was pleased with the way voting was being conducted. "The only problem that I have seen is in my constituency where [some] wrong names were [on the register], otherwise I am very happy with the peaceful conduct of voting," she said. Kheliwe Mkandawire, spokesperson for the Mgwirizano coalition, the UDF's main rival, said, "There are no problems in Mzimba district [in Malawi's Northern Region] where I am. I am getting reports that the voting is going on very peacefully, and this is what we all want." Five presidential candidates are standing in the country's third multi-party election since 1994. Results are expected to be announced on Saturday, and the new president will be sworn in on Sunday. Malawi has 5.6 million registered voters out of a population of 11 million.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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