Polls reopen in Angola elections
LUANDA, Angola, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- Election officials say
Angola polls reopened for a second day and voting will continue
until all have had an opportunity to cast ballots.
The sometimes chaotic situation in the country's first
election in 16 years began with late opening of some polling
stations and a shortage of ballots, particularly in the overcrowded
capital of Luanda, the BBC reported Saturday.
Angola is holding its first free elections since the 1992
conclusion of civil war. Some opposition leaders called for an
election do-over, suggesting the current process favors the ruling
MPLA party of President Jose Eduardo dos Santos.
Unita Party leader Isaias Samakuva said Saturday that
disorganization had caused the system to collapse. "At this stage,
nobody knows what percentage of the electorate was present at
polling stations," he told the BBC.
"We need to make this process credible -- credible not only
to the Angolans themselves but to the international community as
well," Samakuva said.
Luisa Morgantini, head of the European Union observer
mission in Angola, expressed concern about the level of
disorganization at the start of voting, but she told the British
broadcaster that the situation improved as the day went on.
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