Liberian
President elect, George Weah, has told the people of the country that “change
is on.”
He defeated
Vice President Joseph Boakai in the first democratic transfer of power in
decades following two devastating civil wars.
The former
Chelsea player is set to replace incumbent Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who took over
at the helm of Africa’s oldest republic in 2006.
The Liberian
National Election Commission, NEC, announced that Weah had won an
insurmountable 61.5 percent of Tuesday’s vote, which was delayed several weeks
after a legal challenge from Boakai.
The NEC said
that with 98.1 percent of all votes counted, Boakai had only secured 38.5
percent support.
NEC
President Jerome Korkoya told reporters that definitive results would be
released Friday.
But Weah
wasted no time to post on Twitter, “My fellow Liberians, I deeply feel the
emotion of all the nation. I measure the importance and the responsibility of
the immense task which I embrace today. Change is on.”
“The
Liberian people clearly made their choice… and all together we are very
confident in the result of the electoral process,” tweeted Weah before the
official results were announced.
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