Jump to content

2003 Rwandan presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Zsovar3 (talk | contribs) at 20:47, 6 October 2022 (MOS:TITLEABSENTBOLD). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

2003 Rwandan presidential election

← 1988 25 August 2003 2010 →
 
Nominee Paul Kagame Faustin Twagiramungu
Party RPF Independent
Popular vote 3,544,777 134,865
Percentage 95.05% 3.62%

President before election

Paul Kagame
RPF

Elected President

Paul Kagame
RPF

Presidential elections were held in Rwanda on 25 August 2003.[1] They were the first direct presidential elections since the Rwandan Civil War and the first multi-party presidential elections in the country's history. Paul Kagame of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) was elected to a seven-year term with 95% of the vote.[2]

The results were disputed by Faustin Twagiramungu, the main opposition candidate, who argued that "People were controlled, people were forced to vote. It’s not possible that we in the opposition got only 3.7% of the vote. There is something wrong."[3] The elections were widely condemned as fraudulent by outside observers; according to the scholar Timothy Longman, "the Rwandan population experienced the elections not as a transition to democracy but as a series of forced mobilizations that ultimately helped to consolidate RPF rule."[4] The international reactions were nevertheless muted, which, according to Filip Reyntjens, "reinforced the RPF in its conviction that things would blow over, which they did." In Reyntjens' view, "after failing Rwanda in 1994, the international community did so again in 2003 by allowing a dictatorship to take hold."[5]

Background

Prior to the elections a campaign was launched by the RPF to ban the Democratic Republican Movement (MDR), which was charged with "divisionism". This move was criticized by Human Rights Watch, which stated "If the MDR is dissolved, conditions for the elections will change even more dramatically. As the only party outside of the RPF with any substantial support, the MDR would be the only one able to seriously contest at least the legislative if not the presidential elections."[6] The MDR was banned, and Faustin Twagiramungu was forced to run as an independent.[7]

Results

CandidatePartyVotes%
Paul KagameRwandan Patriotic Front3,544,77795.05
Faustin TwagiramunguIndependent134,8653.62
Jean-Népomuscène NayinziraIndependent49,6341.33
Total3,729,276100.00
Valid votes3,729,27697.82
Invalid/blank votes83,2912.18
Total votes3,812,567100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,948,74996.55
Source: African Elections Database

References

  1. ^ Elections in Rwanda African Elections Database
  2. ^ Presidential election of 25 August 2003 Adam Carr
  3. ^ "Faustin Twagiramungu To Challenge Rwandan Election Results". Voice of America. 26 August 2003.
  4. ^ Longman, Timothy (2017). Memory and Justice in Post-Genocide Rwanda. Cambridge University Press. pp. 164f. ISBN 9781107678095.
  5. ^ Reyntjens, Filip (2013). Political Governance in Post-Genocide Rwanda. Cambridge University Press. p. 42f. ISBN 9781107043558.
  6. ^ "Preparing for Elections: Tightening Control in the Name of Unity, Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper" (PDF). Human Rights Watch. May 2003.
  7. ^ "Kagame won, a little too well". The Economist. Kigali. 28 August 2003.