Ghana's Supreme Court declared President John Dramani Mahama (pictured) "validly elected."
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- John Dramani Mahama was sworn in as president of Ghana after December elections
- His challenger, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, was among those alleging voter fraud
- The Supreme Court dismisses all claims of fraud and irregularities
- Challenger Akufo-Addo calls on Ghanaians to "come together and build our country"
After the election,
Ghana's Independent Electoral Commission declared Mahama the winner with
50.7% of the vote, narrowly avoiding a runoff with his main challenger,
Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
But challenges followed,
with allegations of widespread mismanagement and voting irregularities
at more than 10,000 polling stations. Akufo-Addo and two other officials
of his New Patriotic Party sued and the case went to the Supreme Court.
Mahama, from the ruling
National Democratic Congress party, was sworn in as president, and
Thursday's court ruling means he will retain the office.
The Supreme Sourt
dismissed all six claims alleging fraud and irregularities, with judges
ruling unanimously against claims that certification forms had duplicate
serial numbers, that votes from phony polling places were counted, and
that there was duplication of polling station codes, meaning that votes
from a particular voting station might have been counted twice or more.
Akufo-Addo made a
statement after the ruling was announced, saying he will not seek a
court review of the decision, congratulating President Mahama and
calling on Ghanaians to work out their "differences, ease tensions
between us and come together and build our country."
The famously easy-going people of Ghana had been on edge awaiting Thursday's decision by the court.
Nine Supreme Court justices spent 48 days hearing the case, which had riveted the nation.
The proceedings were
broadcast live on Ghanian television and radio, the first time the court
has allowed such broadcasts. They have been immensely popular.
Ghana is one of Africa's
fastest-growing economies. It is the world's second-largest cocoa
producer, after Ivory Coast, and the continent's second biggest gold
miner, after South Africa, according to the United Nations.
But critics say that
despite the rich resources that bring billions of dollars annually, the
wealth is not trickling down to the rural poor who live on the land
where the gold is mined.
In March 1957, Ghana
became the first sub-Saharan European colony to declare independence
from a colonial ruler, in its case, Britain. It endured four military
coups in the first 14 years, after one of which, three former presidents
were executed.
Then, in the election of
2000, it had its first peaceful transfer of power between civilian
presidents. The incumbent won a second term in 2004, but term limits
prohibited him from seeking a third term in 2008.
In that election, John
Atta Mills of the National Democratic Congress narrowly defeated
Akufo-Addo. But Mills died in office last year, elevating his vice
president, Mahama to the presidency.
Last December, Mahama ran for a full term against Akufo-Addo, setting off the Supreme Court battle.
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