Malawi’s president Peter Mutharika narrowly wins re-election

Mutharika takes 38% of votes followed closely by Lazarus Chakwera on 35%

Malawi’s president Peter Mutharika salutes   arrives last month at  the launch of his Democratic Progressive Party’s  manifesto and election campaign at Kamuzu Institute for Sports in Malawi’s capital Lilongwe. Photograph: Getty Images
Malawi’s president Peter Mutharika salutes arrives last month at the launch of his Democratic Progressive Party’s manifesto and election campaign at Kamuzu Institute for Sports in Malawi’s capital Lilongwe. Photograph: Getty Images

Malawi's president Peter Mutharika has narrowly won re-election with 38 per cent of the votes in last week's polls, the electoral commission has declared.

Mr Mutharika's victory was announced in Blantyre, Malawi's largest city, immediately after the high court in Lilongwe, the capital, threw out an injunction preventing the electoral commission from announcing the winner.

The ban was obtained on Saturday by opposition candidate Lazarus Chakwera, who came in a close second with 35 per cent of the votes.

Former vice-president Saulos Chilima came in third with 20 per cent of the ballots.

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The other four presidential candidates collectively got nearly 6 per cent of the vote.

Registered voters

In the parliamentary elections, Mr Mutharika's Democratic Progressive Party won 63 seats in the legislative body, while Mr Chakwera's Malawi Congress Party got 55 seats and 52 independent candidates were elected.

According to the official results, 5.1 million Malawians voted in the May 21st election, representing 74 per cent of the registered voters, said electoral commission chairwoman Jane Ansah.

Mr Chakwera had called for a recount in 10 of Malawi’s 28 districts but the commission declined, saying that the results had been checked at several stages.

In ruling that the results should be announced, the judge said the electoral commission is mandated by law to finalise the electoral process in a timely manner.

He also said there could be a judicial review of the result that the opposition leader had sought in his application.

– AP