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TWO
FAVORITES
กก A total of five candidates contested in the presidential election.
Incumbent President Yoweri Museveni is favorite to win the ballot, according to
a recent poll that gave him 50 percent of votes compared to 33 percent for his
main challenger Kizza Besigye of the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) party.
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| Electorates line to cast their ballots at the City Council polling center in Kampala, capital of Uganda, Feb. 23. (Xinua) | The others are Mayor of Kampala John Ssebaana Kizito
of the Democratic Party, Miria Kalule Obote of the Uganda People's Congress, and
independent candidate Abed Bwanika.
President Yoweri Museveni is running for re-election
to extend his 20 years in power after parliament voted last year to scrap term
limits that would have ended his presidency.
Besigye, 49, Museveni's former doctor and one-time
ally, enjoyed a solid support among the young and in cities. Last week, the
Ugandan High Court adjourned his treason trial until after the presidential
elections while the military court also dropped his trial, giving a boost to the
challenger's campaign.
Richard Shibaale, a Kampala resident who stood first
in the line to cast his ballot at a polling station of community flats, said he
voted for Kizza Besigye, because "we want a change."
Grace Abiong, a tailor whose husband is a policeman,
also said at the nearby Uganda Management Institute polling station that she had
also chosen Besigye. "I found life is getting difficult these years. So I hope
this man can listen to our problems," she said.
But an IT professional who only identified himself as
Edgar, made a different choice. "I still chose Museveni. Changes are needed, but
not on the candidates. We can work with the incumbent to change our country."
NOT WITHOUT A
HITCH
กก The relative peace of the election has so far surprised many who
feared a return to violence after Museveni's main rival in the election, Kizza
Besigye, was charged with treason and rape in November.
However, there were still several incidents reported
around the east African country as some international institutes have feared.
At least seven people, all supporters of the
opposition Forum for Democratic Changes (FDC) party, have been arrested in
eastern Uganda for "violating" Thursday's general elections, the district Police
commander Chris Barugahare was quoted by the Uganda state radio as saying.
Also, in the war-ravaged north, a fighter with the
Lord's Resistance Army rebels who attempted to attack a vehicle carrying voting
materials was shot dead at the scene by the Ugandan army on the election day.
Multiparty politics was banned in Uganda almost 20
years ago following the government's concern that they were creating divisions
among Ugandans. Political parties were only allowed to operate in abeyance.
But a referendum held on July 28, 2005 voted for the
return of multiparty politics. The country's Movement system of government will
end after Thursday's elections.
According to the EC, the outcome of votes counting is
expected on Saturday. Enditem
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