Malawi counts votes after tightly contested poll

A presiding officer sorts ballot papers with polling staff and political parties monitors during vote counting at the Ndirande Community ground polling centre on May 21, 2019 in Blantyre, southern Malawi. PHOTO | AMOS GUMULIRA | AFP

What you need to know:

  • This is the first time the results are being transmitted electronically to the national tally centre.
  • Nearly seven million voters registered for the elections to pick the next president, members of Parliament and local councillors.

The counting of votes is under way in Malawi’s fiercely contested presidential and parliamentary elections.

The country’s electoral commission says it has started receiving results from more than 5,000 polling stations across the country.

This is the first time the results are being transmitted electronically to the national tally centre. Nearly seven million voters registered for the elections to pick the next president, members of Parliament and local councillors.

Polls have closed across the country and the real test for Malawi’s electoral agency has just begun.

So far just under 2 per cent of the results have reached the national tally centre. The majority of polling stations were in rural areas, where access to the internet and telephone services might pose a challenge.

Under the country’s laws, the electoral commission has up to eight days to announce the outcome of the polls.

These are Malawi’s most unpredictable elections in recent history. President Peter Mutharika is seeking a second and final term but faces tough opposition from his own Vice President Saulos Chilima and Lazarus Chakwera - a retired evangelist who leads Malawi’s oldest political party.