Liberia's Supreme Court suspends presidential run-off amid fraud claims

Liberia's Supreme Court suspended the presidential run-off after Charles Brumskine's Liberty Party and Joseph Boakai's Unity Party challenged the first election's results.

AP

Liberia's Supreme Court has stayed next week's presidential run-off election until it considers a challenge to first-round results by a losing candidate who has alleged fraud.

Third-place finisher Charles Brumskine's Liberty Party challenged the results of last month's vote, which set up a November 7 run-off between former soccer star George Weah and Vice President Joseph Boakai.

The election is meant to usher in Liberia's first democratic transition since 1944 after long periods of military rule and a civil war that ended in 2003.

In a writ issued late on Tuesday, the court instructed Liberty Party and the National Elections Commission to file briefs by Thursday at the latest. It was unclear if the court would rule before November 7.

Earlier this week, Boakai's Unity Party announced it was backing Liberty Party's challenge, accusing President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, a Unity Party member, of interfering in the October 10 vote. Johnson Sirleaf denied those charges.

International observers, including the European Union and the Carter Center, said they did not see any major problems with the first round vote.

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