UN officials and Liberian residents are worried that turnout might drop for Tuesday's presidential run-off, which pits soccer millionaire George Weah against former finance minister Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf. Almost 75 percent of the electorate voted in the first round on 11 October, but since then heavy rains have left more polling stations inaccessible, some people who trekked home to cast their ballot cannot afford to make a second journey, and others are no longer interested now that their candidate is not in the race. "We are very concerned that turn-out will not be as high for this election as for the first round," said Paul Risley, spokesman for the UN mission in Liberia (UNMIL). "There has not been the same level of political campaigning and interest." Thomas Newland is one voter who has failed to be captivated this time around, now that his first choice has been eliminated from the contest. "I do not have respect for either of the two remaining candidates so I will just stay home and drink my beer," the street vendor told IRIN on the potholed streets of the capital, Monrovia. But others, like 48-year-old Samuel Yamah, are desperate to have their say in the second round and just do not have the means to do it. Yamah is one of thousands who moved to the capital in search of work but registered to vote in his county of origin, because that's where he hopes to return when better times come. "I paid my own way to go back home and vote in the first round, but this time I can't afford it," said Samuel Yamah. "I'm a plumber but it's difficult finding work when most of the country has no running water. So voting in the second round is looking difficult." In a last-ditch effort, he was camping outside Weah's party headquarters on Monday, with scores of others, hoping that someone would help him make the six-hour trip up to Nimba County so he could cast his ballot for the soccer legend. But another thing to reckon with is that the infrastructure has deteriorated in some areas.
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| A clock outside Liberia's National Elections Commission counts down to Tuesday's presidential run-off |
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