Election petition delays Zambian president
Zambian President Edgar Lungu said on Tuesday his inauguration would
be delayed until a court rules on a challenge from his main election
rival who said the vote was rigged.
Results on Monday showed Lungu narrowly won re-election in Africa’s
second-largest copper producer which is suffering economic slump due to
depressed commodity prices, Reuters reported.
But his rival, opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema, said he would
challenge the result, alleging fraud during the vote counting process
after Thursday’s election.
Police said about 150 protesters have been arrested in opposition
strongholds in the southern African country, while one ruling party
supporter was detained on Monday after torching a police vehicle during
celebrations.
A rule introduced in January said the winner of a presidential
election cannot be sworn in if the vote is contested in a court, which
has two weeks to decide on such a petition.
Wearing a white T-shirt with the victory symbol and the words ‘I love
peace’ on it, the president told his supporters at a victory rally in
the capital Lusaka: “We will have to wait before I am sworn in because I
am told some people have gone to court.
The courts of law are our
creature and so the courts should be given latitude to make decisions.”
Lungu won 50.35 percent of the vote against 47.63 percent for Hichilema.
Hichilema’s United Party for National Development (UPND) said on Monday it will appeal the result at the Constitutional Court.
Post a Comment