Malawian President Bingu wa Mutharika took a strong early lead on Wednesday in the vote count from the Southern African country’s presidential election.
He based his campaign for a second term on his record of turning Malawi into a net food exporter and delivering three years of growth above 7% in the country of 13-million where annual gross domestic product is only $313 per capita.
But he faced an opposition challenge united behind long-time opposition leader John Tembo, who had the support of former president Bakili Muluzi, himself excluded from the contest.
The first results of Tuesday’s presidential election from the central region, traditionally an opposition stronghold, showed Wa Mutharika had 845Â 000 votes with 254Â 000 for Tembo.
”A strong showing by the incumbent in this region tells you a trend across the country and the possible outcome of the election,” said a senior election official who asked for anonymity.
A handful of results from polling stations in the capital, Lilongwe, showed the president had an even bigger lead there. A parliamentary vote was also held on Tuesday.
Official results have been scheduled for midday, but counting has been slow.
Observer missions from the European Union and the Commonwealth of mostly former British colonies described the voting as calm and without incident.
The election is a test of political stability in largely peaceful Malawi after a protracted power struggle between Wa Mutharika and Muluzi prompted a failed impeachment bid and allegations of a coup plot, unnerving Western donors.
Three arrested
However, a senior police officer said that on Tuesday police raided a private radio station owned by Muluzi and arrested three staffers before polls opened.
”The issue is under investigation,” said police spokesperson Willie Mwaluka, who said the raid on Joy Radio was conducted at 4am on Tuesday, two hours before polling stations opened.
Joy Radio has been the main campaign weapon of the opposition ahead of the elections.
Lloyd Zawanda, a senior editor at Joy Radio, said police had confiscated a tape containing a satirical programme that had just been broadcast.
”We are waiting to hear if they have been charged, and the radio station has been told not to air any other programmes,” said Zawanda. ”We are just playing music.”
Police had cordoned off the station and were guarding the premises, in the leafy Blantyre suburb of Naperi, he said.
The radio station, opened by Muluzi when he was head of state in 2003, has twice before been closed for breaching broadcasting lawas. — Reuters