The vote could serve as an example for democratic transition in
Africa, where veteran rulers in Burundi and Congo Republic have this
year changed the constitution to pave the way for a fresh term in
office.
Burkina Faso should announce provisional results on Monday from an election to choose the West African country's first new leader in decades, the head of the electoral commission said.
Sunday's peaceful election comes after longtime leader Blaise Compaore
was toppled in a popular uprising in October 2014 in which
demonstrators faced down the security forces over his attempt to extend
his tenure.
The vote could serve as an example for democratic transition in Africa, where veteran rulers in Burundi and Congo Republic have this year changed the constitution to pave the way for a fresh term in office.
It
also represents a pivotal moment for a nation ruled by leaders who came
to power in coups for most of its history since independence from France in 1960.
There
was strong turnout in all 45 provinces and logistical problems at the
start of the day were by-and-large resolved, Barthelemy Kere, president
of the Independent National Electoral Commission, told a news conference
late on Sunday.
Analysts say only two of the 14
candidates stand a real chance of winning and a second round is
possible, though in the absence of reliable opinion polls it is
difficult to tell.
One is Roch Marc Kabore, prime
minister and president of the National Assembly under Compaore. The
other is Zephirin Diabre, who was minister of finance in the 1990s
before stepping down to start an opposition party.
Kabore
heads the Movement of People for Progress (MPP), made up of disaffected
allies of Compaore who left the party months before he stood down.
Diabre fronts the Union for Progress and Change (UPC), which was the
formal opposition.
By 6:30 a.m. (0630 GMT) the
electoral commission had announced results for 21 communes out of 368
communes total and those showed Kabore in the lead with Diabre second.
Compaore seized power in a coup, ruled for 27 years and won four elections, all of which were criticised as unfair.
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