Liberia senate race: Landslide win for former world best player George Oppong Weah

Published on: 28 December 2014
Liberia senate race: Landslide win for former world best player George Oppong Weah
George Weah has become a powerful senator

The former World Player of the Year George Weah has won a landslide victory in Liberia's senate elections by coming out ahead of the president's son, in polls disrupted by the Ebola outbreak.

Mr Weah got 78% of the vote for the Montserrado county seat, which includes the capital Monrovia.

He beat Robert Sirleaf, the son of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who took nearly 11%.

Low turnout in the poll, which was first planned for October, was blamed on concerns about Ebola.

Strict health controls were in place to try to prevent the spread of the disease.

A Liberian red cross official takes the temperature of a man before casting his vote in senate electionsHealth workers took the temperatures of voters as a precaution against Ebola

A Liberian woman casts her vote in senate electionsTurnout was low, despite safety measures

Those who came to polling stations had their temperature taken, were told to stand a metre (3ft) apart and wash their hands before and after voting.

Liberia has been one of the countries worst affected by Ebola, with almost 3,400 deaths, the UN says.

Other winners in the senate elections include Jewel Howard-Taylor, the ex-wife of the jailed former president Charles Taylor, and the former rebel leader Prince Johnson. Both retained their seats.

The National Elections Commission chairman, Jerome Korkoya, called the conclusion of the vote "the end of a crucial journey".

Mr Weah won the first round of the 2005 presidential election, losing the runoff to Ms Johnson-Sirleaf.

He is the only African to be named Fifa's world player of the year, winning in 1995.

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