Police in Malawi have arrested eight people for alleged electoral fraud as the country waits for the final results of Tuesday’s general election.
Inspector General, Merlyne Yolamu, said the suspects, who were working as data entry clerks, had been trying to manipulate the figures.
Malawi’s 2019 election was marred by controversy when the highest court annulled then President Peter Mutharika’s victory, citing widespread irregularities, the BBC reports.
As a result, Malawi’s electoral commission was on high alert for any potential issues. Official tallies, so far, suggest Mutharika is leading the race for the presidency with incumbent Lazarus Chakwera in second place.
More results from Malawi’s 36 districts are expected to be released on Saturday – a candidate needs to win more than 50 percent of the vote, or a run-off is held.
In the meantime, Chakwera’s Malawi Congress Party said it had lodged a complaint with the electoral commission, claiming to have discovered irregularities in the count.
Officials did not specify what those irregularities were.
The commission is expected to announce the outcome of the election only after all votes have been tallied and verified in order to avoid the possibility of the final result being challenged.
According to law, the electoral commission had until the end of Wednesday to announce the final tallies.
Read More: Early Malawi election results show Mutharika in the lead, but runoff likely
In 2019, when Mutharika’s victory was annulled, a court said there had been widespread tampering, including the use of Tipp-Ex correction fluid on results sheets.
Chakwera, 70, won the re-run by a wide margin, propelling him to the presidency.
Mutharika, 85, is hoping to regain office in what would be a dramatic political comeback.
Malawians also voted in parliamentary and local elections following a campaign dominated by the worsening economic crisis that has seen a severe shortage of fuel and foreign currency.
The official inflation rate is close to 30 percent, with a frozen chicken in a supermarket in the capital, Lilongwe, costing about $20 (£15), in a nation where most people live on $2 a day or less.
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