By A Correspondent
According to official results, Mozambique’s ruling Frelimo party has extended its 49-year hold on power in the southern African nation after winning the country’s contentious, violent election.
Filipe Nyusi, who has served two terms, will be replaced by Daniel Chapo, Frelimo’s relatively unknown presidential candidate who is viewed as a change agent.
Chapo, who received 71% of the vote, will become the first president to be born in the years following independence in 1975 at the age of 47. Venancio Mondlane, his nearest rival, received 20%.
Chapo said in his victory speech: “We remained silent all this time, for respecting the law. We are a well-organised party that plans for success.
Following the announcement of the result, there have been violent protests in several towns and a number of people have been killed. In certain places, there is also a significant police presence.
Nationwide protests have been sparked by claims of election tampering and the murder of opposition supporters.
President Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe, who has also been accused of election fraud in the past, congratulated Chapo on his “resounding victory” before the results were made public.
Third place went to Ossufo Momade, the candidate of Renamo, the former main opposition party and a former rebel group.
Political analyst Tomas Viera Mario told the BBC that Renamo had lost its “historical position” because Momade, 68, had failed to attract young voters.
The numbers announced surprised all voters, including some members and sympathisers of the ruling party, especially Frelimo’s landslide victory.
The deputy chairperson of the electoral commission Fernando Mazanga, who was appointed by Renamo, said the “results are against electoral justice”.
“These results do not represent the reality,” he said.
The electoral commission says 43% of the more than 17 million registered voters took part in the poll.
Parliamentary and provincial elections were held at the same time as the presidential vote.
Frelimo won 195 of the 250 seats in parliament. The opposition Podemos, which backed Mondlane for president, got 31 seats and Renamo secured 20 seats.
Frelimo also won all the provincial elections.
President Nyusi followed the election results with a jubilant television address to the nation.
“With more than 70% of the votes, I don’t see any teacher failing a student,” he said.
The election had been seen as a turning-point for the resource-rich country which is wracked by economic problems, corruption, and poverty.
Mondlane had called for a national strike on Thursday in protest at the alleged rigging.
He said that the protests would honour his lawyer and a party official who were shot dead last week in what he described as politically motivated killings.
He claimed that he won the election despite preliminary polls showing that Chapo was well ahead.
Mondlane now has until December to contest the results.
On Monday, he organised nationwide demonstrations, which were dispersed by police firing live rounds and tear gas.
The election has also been criticised by EU election observers, who said some results may have been doctored.
They said there were “irregularities during counting and unjustified alteration of election results”.
Political analyst Adriano Nuvunga decried what he called a pattern of fraudulent elections in Mozambique.
The electoral commission has declined to comment on allegations of vote-rigging, according to Reuters.
Chapo will be sworn into office in January.