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Mauritania ruling party pulls ahead in vote: electoral commission

By AFP
Mauritania Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz casts his vote on September 1 at a polling station in Nouakchott, during the country's legislative, regional and local elections.  By AHMED OULD MOHAMED OULD ELHADJ AFP
SEP 9, 2018 LISTEN
Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz casts his vote on September 1 at a polling station in Nouakchott, during the country's legislative, regional and local elections. By AHMED OULD MOHAMED OULD ELHADJ (AFP)

Mauritania's ruling party has drawn well into the lead in legislative, regional and local elections held earlier this month, the electoral commission said Sunday, in the west African country's last vote ahead of key presidential polls.

"The Union for the Republic is the leading political party according to provisional results" of the first-round September 1 vote, commission spokesman Mustafa Sidel Moktar told AFP.

The party has so far won 67 of the 157 national assembly seats, compared to 14 for the second-place Islamist party Tewassoul, as well as four of the 13 regional councils and 108 of 219 municipalities, he said.

The turnout was 73.4 percent, Mohamed Vall Ould Bella of the Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) said on Saturday, in a country with a registered electorate of some 1.4 million.

A second round vote will be held on September 15 to decide 22 national assembly seats, nine regional councils and 115 municipalities.

The elections in Mauritania, a frontline state in the fight against Islamist extremists, were seen as a test for head of state Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz seven months before a presidential vote.

The opposition boycotted the last polls in 2013 but a record 98 parties took part this time.

Aziz, 61, who came to power in a coup in 2008, won elections in 2009 and again in 2014 for a second five-year term.

He has been frequently accused by opposition figures and NGOs of rights abuses, and though he says he will not seek a third mandate -- which would be against the constitution -- statements by ministers and supporters have led some to suggest he might.

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