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Ivory Coast awaited results Tuesday from parliamentary elections in which President Alassane Ouattara's party appeared on track for an absolute majority, while the peaceful polls raised hopes the country's recent violent tensions were behind it. Partial results reported on public television have shown Ouattara's RHDP in line for at least 128 of 255 seats in Saturday's election. The West African country's electoral commission was expected to issue complete results later Tuesday after having delayed a planned announcement on Monday night. The vote passed off peacefully and for the first time in a decade included all of the country's main political players, providing hope that Ivory Coast has begun to emerge from recent violent tensions. It was a key test of stability following violence surrounding October's presidential vote, which was boycotted by the opposition and claimed 87 lives in the former French colony. The main opposition PDCI has however alleged electoral fraud, while the FPI party of ex-president Laurent Gbagbo has called on its supporters to remain calm and await the official results. "The RHDP has succeeded in tipping many regions in its favour and it is in the process of acquiring the status of a national party, beyond its traditional strongholds in the north of the country," said political scientist Sylvain N'Guessan. The PDCI opposition, the party of ex-president Henri Konan Bedie, "seems to be losing momentum," he said, and appears sure to have fewer seats than in the previous legislature. The return of Gbagbo's FPI, or Ivorian Popular Front, which participated after a decade of boycott, "did not have a great influence on either the score or the turnout," said N'Guessan. The FPI had boycotted all polls since the arrest of Gbagbo in 2011 in Abidjan and his transfer to the International Criminal Court in The Hague. His arrest followed violence after the 2010 presidential election that left 3,000 dead. Gbagbo was acquitted in January 2019 and is now living in Brussels pending the outcome of an appeal, though he has announced plans to return home. Ouattara has recently reached out to his old foe in a bid for "national reconciliation" and issued Gbagbo with two passports, one of them a diplomatic pass. The 79-year-old president ignited political unrest last year when he announced he would seek a third term in office -- a scheme that critics said sidestepped constitutional limits. For the legislative elections, Bedie's PDCI formed an alliance with Together for Democracy and Sovereignty, a coalition including supporters of Gbagbo and dominated by his FPI. The results of the last three constituencies were expected Tuesday, including from the Yopougon area of Abidjan, the largest in the country with nearly 500,000 voters out of a total of 7.4 million. Results from Yopougon will carry heavy symbolic weight as it had in the past been a major Gbagbo stronghold. Ouattara's RHDP has already won several former strongholds of the PDCI, including in the capital Yamoussoukro. de/stb/mjs/ri
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2021-03-09
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YamoussoukroDany N'GuessanYopougonAlassane OuattaraPolitical scienceLaurent GbagboColonyAbidjanUSA GymnasticsInternational Criminal CourtBrusselsIvory CoastPresident of FranceElectoral fraudFrance2010 Ivorian presidential electionKonnanRally of Houphouëtists for Democracy and PeaceIvorian Popular FrontSupermajorityPublic broadcastingElection boycottMomentum

