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2002 Equatorial Guinean presidential election

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Summary

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FieldValue
countryEquatorial Guinea
typepresidential
previous_election1996 Equatorial Guinean presidential election
previous_year1996
next_election2009 Equatorial Guinean presidential election
next_year2009
election_date15 December 2002
registered215,447
turnout97.98%
image1Teodoro Obiang detail, 1650FRP051.jpg
nominee1Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo
party1Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea
popular_vote1204,367
percentage197.06%
image23x4.svg
nominee2Celestino Bonifacio Bacalé
party2Convergence for Social Democracy (Equatorial Guinea)
popular_vote24,570
percentage22.17%
titlePresident
before_electionTeodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo
before_partyPDGE
after_electionTeodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo
after_partyPDGE

Presidential elections were held in Equatorial Guinea on 15 December 2002. Incumbent President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo easily won another term amidst an opposition boycott.

Boycotts

The four opposition candidates withdrew their candidacy on election day. The first opposition candidate to withdraw was Convergence for Social Democracy (CPDS) candidate Celestino Bonifacio Bacalé. He denounced the election, saying that "voting is totally fraudulent at every level. In 90% of the polling stations, the vote is being carried out in public, and people are being obliged to take only one voting slip, the one for Obiang". He also said that some designated polling stations did not actually exist, while some polling stations that were not designated had suddenly appeared; he also alleged that secret ballot envelopes were being opened and checked by electoral officials. Furthermore, according to Bacalé, some individuals in charge of polling stations had been deprived of that responsibility due to their insistence on having a free and fair election, and he said that the CPDS would not recognize the results. Despite Bacalé's withdrawal, his name remained on the ballot.

Aside from Bacalé, the other three withdrawn candidates were Secundino Oyono of the Social Democratic and Popular Convergence (CSDP), Jeremiah Ondo of the Popular Union (UP), and Buenaventura Mosuy of the Party of the Social Democratic Coalition. Severo Moto, an opposition leader in exile, said that there was no chance of a free and fair election.

Conduct

President Obiang's Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE) said that voting occurred "in a normal and peaceful atmosphere", while Minister of the Interior Clemente Engonga denounced the withdrawal of the opposition candidates as "unlawful ... irresponsible and anti-democratic" and said that it was "proof of [their] bad faith and diabolical spirit". The opposition candidates demanded a new election "in the best conditions of freedom, legality and transparency".

One electoral observer, Ahmed Rajab, told the BBC that he had not seen "any irregularities as such", although he emphasized that he did not know what had occurred prior to the election and said that there might have been "an element of fear" involved in the support for Obiang. He said that the government was embarrassed by the loss of credibility caused by the opposition withdrawal, which left Obiang as the winner of what was effectively a one-candidate election.

Results

Obiang received 97% of the votes, according to official results. Voter turnout was allegedly 98%. At least one voting district was recorded as giving Obiang 103% of the vote, a statistical impossibility without there having been electoral fraud.

References

References

  1. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2579477.stm "'Landslide' in Equatorial Guinea"], BBC News, 16 December 2002.
  2. [[Charles E. Cobb Jr.. Charles Cobb Jr.]], [https://allafrica.com/stories/200212160112.html "Equatorial Guinea: Obiang Sure to Win As Opposition Quits Poll"], allAfrica.com, December 16, 2002.
  3. [http://www.cpds-gq.org/Presentacion.html#presentacion4 Page at CPDS website] {{Webarchive. link. (2008-09-16 {{in lang). es.
  4. Alexander Smoltczyk. (28 August 2006). "Rich in Oil, Poor in Human Rights: Torture and Poverty in Equatorial Guinea".
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