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senegal DAKAR:Senegalvoted in a run-off election on Sunday pitting octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade, whose bid for a third term has triggered violent protests, against former ally and prime minister Macky Sall.

The vote in the usually peaceful nation is a test for democracy inWest Africawhere polls have been marred by fraud and bloodshed and where a military coup toppled the government ofMalilast week.

"I hope that, like during the first round, the Senegalese will show the world that they know how to vote," said Ahrouna Ndiaye, 32, after lining up to vote in a school in the dusty capital Dakar. "And I hope the best candidate wins."

Wade, 85, fell short of a majority in the Feb. 26 first round vote with 34.8 percent, with Sall placing second with 26.6 percent. The other first-round opposition candidates have now united behind Sall against Wade, bolstering his chances.

Both candidates have said they cannot envisage defeat in the run-off, paving the way for a possible dispute when results come in on Monday or Tuesday, and a possible resumption of street protests. There are more than five million registered voters.

Regional bloc ECOWAS's observer mission inSenegalurged voters to remain peaceful on Sunday, saying the election will "mark a further step toward consolidating the democratic gains and political stability of the country".

At least six people were killed in protests over Wade's candidacy before the first round but the runup to the second-round was peaceful.

Opposition activists say Wade's bid for a third term is unconstitutional and some voters see him as yet another example of a long-serving African leader seeking to hang on to power.

A top legal body, however, has upheld his bid after the incumbent leader argued his first term should not count because it began before a two-term limit was adopted. And his supporters say he deserves more time in office.

"We must let him who started his work continue with it," Yaye Fatou Diop, said a 25-year-old communications worker voting in aDakarsuburb. "I am for progress. He has done a good job, he has done the best he can do."

Wade hopes to extend his 12-year-rule by wooing those who did not vote in February and by courting religious leaders who wield a strong influence in the majority Muslim country.

DISPUTED RESULTS?

Sall's manifesto includes a revamp ofSenegal's outage-prone energy sector and renewed efforts to end a simmering rebellion in the southern Casamance region, once a tourist hotspot.

Sall, 50, also hopes to lure voters with a promise to cut taxes on basics such as rice in a country where rising food prices mean some households spend half their income to ensure a daily communal bowl of rice and sauce.

Senegalis the only nation in mainlandWest Africawithout a coup since independence, but an army uprising that toppled the government of neighbouringMalilast week has raised security fears.

Poverty and mass unemployment are the main grievances among voters. Wade, who came to power in 2000, argues that he has done more than the rival Socialists did in the 40 years they ruled since independence fromFrancein 1960.

"Poverty has been wiped out ofSenegal, but I do not deny that there are some pockets in major cities. I'll take care of it after the elections," Wade said during his last campaign rally inDakaron Friday.

Reflecting investor concerns, Samir Gadio, London-based emerging markets analyst at Standard Bank, said the market had been negative onSenegal's $500 million Eurobond before the first round vote due to the deteriorating political and security climate.

"The smooth electoral process since and the possibility of an orderly transition in coming days would boostSenegal's historical reputation of political stability," Gadio said in a note. "The main stress point is obviously whether both parties will immediately accept the outcome of Sunday's contest."

Copyright Reuters, 2012
 

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