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Liberia Run-off election underway: Joseph Boakai versus George Weah 

By PrimeNewsKenya
George Weah _Joseph Boakai
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Polls have opened in Liberia to elect a new president in a contested run-off election.

The delayed vote on Tuesday pits George Weah, a 51-year-old ex-international football star and Liberian senator, against 73-year-old Joseph Boakai, who has served as the vice president under President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf for the past 12 years.

A total of 5,390 polling stations across the country opened their doors for 2.1 million registered voters at 08:00 GMT. Polls will close at 18:00 GMT.

Both Weah, the candidate for the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC), and Boakai, of the Unity Party, have promised to revive Liberia's struggling economy and kick-start infrastructure projects.

The two ranked first and second respectively in the October 10 first round - Weah won 38.8 percent and Boakai 28.8 percent - but neither secured the 50 percent needed to win outright.

Al Jazeera's Mohammed Adow, reporting from Liberia's capital, Monrovia, said: "Many Liberians feel that these are very crucial elections and that they need to cast their vote."

"Many of them have even postponed their Christmas celebrations to ensure that they vote today," he added.

Initially scheduled for November 7, the run-off was delayed after the party of a third candidate filed a legal complaint alleging voter fraud and irregularities.

Liberia's Supreme Court ultimately cleared the way for the vote to take place on Tuesday.


Campaign pledges

Weah has promised to lower poverty levels by creating jobs in both infrastructure and agriculture.

He has said a CDC government would consider paying exam fees and using a sector-wide review to bolster Liberia's weak education system.

He is using his popularity as a sports icon to garner votes with Liberian youth, a large demographic. Roughly 60 percent of Liberia's population is under 30.

Jewel Taylor-Howard, a senior senator and ex-wife of former President Charles Taylor who is serving a 50-year sentence for war crimes, is running as Weah's running mate.

The platform of Boakai's Unity Party hinges on prudent economic decisions and infrastructure.

Road construction is his flagship issue.

 "When you have roads, all other things can happen," Boakai has said, while also promising to create 50,000 jobs in his first 150 days in office.

If the run-off goes smoothly and results are accepted by both parties, it will be the first peaceful transition of power in Liberia in more than 70 years.

Boakai also hopes to gain from the respect earned by Sirleaf.

In 2011, Sirleaf was a joint recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for her "non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women's rights to full participation in peace-building work" in the wake of Liberia's two bloody civil wars, which spanned 14 years before ending in 2003.

She has made it clear that she wishes to hand over power to a democratically elected president when her time in office comes to an end on January 15, 2018.

 

Credit: Primenewskenya.com

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