Djibouti’s President Ismail Omar Guelleh has won an election with 97.8% of the vote, keeping him at the helm of the strategically-placed Horn of Africa nation for a sixth term, preliminary official results show.
The 78-year-old’s sole challenger Mohamed Farah Samatar got 2.19% of the vote, in a poll boycotted by most of the opposition.
Guelleh’s campaign focused on the fact that he had maintained stability in Djibouti at a time when other regional states, and the Middle East, had been hit by conflict.
Lying on the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, Djibouti serves as a gateway to the Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.
Guelleh is only Djibouti’s second president since it gained its independence from France in 1977.
Guelleh celebrated his victory at his home, saying it was a victory for the entire nation.
Officials said that more than 80% of registered voters cast their ballots in Friday’s election.
The results were released by the interior ministry but still need to be validated by judges on the constitutional council before Guelleh can be sworn in for another five-year term.
He won the 2021 election by a similar margin. In 2010, Djibouti’s parliament scrapped term limits, and shortened presidential mandates from six to five years.
It also set 75 as the age limit for candidates, before changing the constitution in November so that Guelleh could run for office again
