Polls opened this morning in Ghana’s high-stakes presidential
and parliamentary polls as the country seeks to make good on its promise
as a beacon of democracy in turbulent West Africa.
Long lines could be seen at some polling stations in the capital of Accra
and
some voters said they waited since the early hours for the tight
election that sees President John Dramani Mahama face main opposition
candidate Nana Akufo-Addo.
Two main presidential candidates are
vying to lead the country, now enjoying a booming economy, with oil
income, now added to the usual sources from gold, cocoa and bauxite.
Ghana
has had five elections since military rule ended in 1992, but the
stakes are seen as higher than ever this time, as commercial oil
production that began in 2010 is set to expand.
President John
Dramani Mahama, 54, of the National Democratic Congress, only took power
in July, when
his predecessor John Atta Mills died following an
illness.
His challenger, 68-year-old Nana Akufo-Addo of the New
Patriotic Party, lost by less than one percentage point in 2008, and
insists he is poised to reverse that narrow defeat.
Ghana, the
first sub-Saharan African nation to gain independence from colonial rule
in 1957, suffered a number of military coups before returning to
democracy in 1992.
Both
parties have since quit power after an election loss, establishing
Ghana’s democratic credentials in a region that has seen its share of
rigged polls and coups.
US President Barack Obama chose Ghana for his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa after taking office in 2009.
But
analysts say that as Ghana’s democracy has deepened, the rivalry
between the ruling NDC and challenger NPP has also intensified.
“Mutual
loathing may be a good way to describe how the parties view each
other,” said Emmanuel Gyimah-Boadi, a political science professor at the
University of Ghana.
“Both parties have tasted power. They know
what comes with power. If you capture the presidency, you control all
the machinery of the state and unlike the past, we now have oil. The
state coffers will be brimming.”
Voters will also be electing a new 275-seat parliament. The NDC won a narrow edge in seats over the NPP in the 2008 vote.
The names of six minor candidates also appear on the presidential ballot and could help force a runoff second-round vote.
One
of the world’s newest oil producers, Ghana is also a top exporter of
cocoa and gold, with economic growth of 14 percent in 2011. Eight
percent growth is expected for 2012 and 2013, according to the World
Bank.
Voters are anxious to feel the benefits of the boom and
Mahama insists he deserves a full four-year term to complete the project
the NDC started in 2008.
In an interview with AFP, Akufo-Addo countered that the economic growth numbers under the NDC are “just figures on paper”.
They
“are not reflecting anybody’s prosperity in Ghana. In terms of the
actual standard of living and quality of life of our people, they are
radically different from the GDP figures”, he said.
Political
observers say the campaign has been the most policy-driven ever in the
country of some 24 million people, but note that ethnic and regional
allegiances are still crucial.
“There is always a bit of denial
about the role of ethnic voting,” said Victor Brobbey, a research fellow
at the Centre for Democratic Development, an Accra think tank.
Campaigning
on regional lines is “not something you do openly here”, but both
parties know they need a large turnout in their stronghold areas, he
said.
The north, by far the poorest region and Mahama’s home area,
is considered an NDC stronghold along with the eastern Volta region,
while the NPP is dominant in the centre of the country.
The west
and areas surrounding the capital Accra in the southeast are seen as
swing districts, where, according to analysts, a more cosmopolitan
electorate votes based on policy and political differences.
How to
spend Ghana’s forthcoming oil money has been one of the key issues of
the campaign, with Mahama advocating a large investment in
infrastructure and Akufo-Addo fronting his signature policy of free
secondary education.
Mahama has claimed that Akufo-Addo’s
programme is unfeasible and experts have warned that pledging to fund
education with oil revenue, which can fluctuate widely over time, could
prove challenging.
But the challenger, who comes from eastern
Ghana, insisted he is “not going to be intimidated by language about
‘oh, commodity prices will fall’,”.
Free secondary education “is what we want to do and we are definitely going to do it”, he told AFP.
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