Mbanda rejected a statement issued on Friday by the local European
Union delegation that there was no independent monitoring in place
during the vote.
Rwandans voted overwhelmingly to support changes to the constitution that would allow President Paul Kagame to extend his term in office, possibly until 2034, provisional results showed on Saturday.
Kagame,
58, would be able to run again in 2017 after his second term ends. He
has been president since 2000 but effectively in control since his rebel
force marched into Kigali in 1994 to end a genocide.
"The
electoral commission declares in public that 98.3 percent of voting
Rwandans accepted the constitution as amended in 2015," National
Electoral Commission chairman Kalisa Mbanda told a news conference after Friday's vote.
Mbanda
rejected a statement issued on Friday by the local European Union
delegation that there was no independent monitoring in place during the
vote.
"I don't see any basis on which one can say
that there were no independent observers. We registered 630 observers
and all are independent," he said.
The number of
those who voted in favour of the changes was 6.16 million. The
commission released some partial results late on Friday and final
results are expected on Monday.
The vote took place despite criticism of such an amendment by Western donors.
The
United States renewed its criticism on Saturday. "We regret that the
arrangements for the referendum failed to provide sufficient time and
opportunity for political debate on the merits of the proposed
provisions," White House National Security spokesman Ned Price said in a statement.
Kagame
has not said if he would run again, but he is widely expected to. He
said on Friday the vote to change the constitution was the people's
choice.
The tiny Democratic Green Party, the only
real opposition party, tried to get the constitutional changes blocked
through the courts but this was rejected.
The party also said it was not given a chance to campaign against the changes.
"The
Democratic Green Party ... will not give up on the struggle to make
Rwanda a vibrant democracy. We will continue to work towards achieving a
peaceful transfer of power in Rwanda," Frank Habineza, the party's president, said in a statement late on Friday.
Despite
its success in delivering economic and social change, rights groups
accuse Kagame's government of stifling the media and political
opposition, a charge it denies.
The debate about
extending presidential terms has swept other African nations, triggering
violence and instability in Burundi and Congo Republic but not in
Rwanda.
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