Published: 12:37, July 15, 2024 | Updated: 15:03, July 15, 2024
Rwandans vote in election expected to extend Kagame's rule
By Reuters
Rwanda's President Paul Kagame waves as he arrives for his final election campaign rally in Kigali, Rwanda, July 13, 2024. (PHOTO / AP)

KIGALI — Voters in Rwanda headed to the polls on Monday to elect their next president, with 66-year-old incumbent Paul Kagame who has ruled the central African country for nearly a quarter of a century expected to cruise to victory.

Polling centers were due to open at 7 am local time (0500 GMT) for the more than 9 million eligible voters to cast their ballots for the president and lawmakers. Provisional results are expected by July 20.

Kagame, who led a rebel force that captured power after ending the genocide in 1994, has been president since 2000. He is running against two other candidates, Frank Habineza and Philippe Mpayimana, who also challenged him at the last polls in 2017

On the streets, most voters said they would vote for Kagame who they praise for shepherding the country of 14 million from the ravages of the 1994 genocide by prioritizing development and putting in place effective social services.

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"Kagame has achieved a lot for us ... we have security, all children are able to go to school, and they get meals at school," said Tuyiringirimana Olivier, a construction worker who lives in Rwanda's southern province.

"That is why we must support him. I have already made my choice. I am confident that Rwanda is heading in a good direction."

Kagame, who led a rebel force that captured power after ending the genocide in 1994, has been president since 2000. He is running against two other candidates, Frank Habineza and Philippe Mpayimana, who also challenged him at the last polls in 2017.

Several other candidates, including some of Kagame's most vocal critics, were barred from running for various reasons that included prior criminal convictions.

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Kagame won nearly 99 percent of the vote in the 2017 poll, which followed a constitutional change removing term limits that would have prevented him from standing again.