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Sata Holds Lead in Zambian Presidential Poll


The leader of the Zambian opposition Patriotic Front (PF), Michael "King Cobra" Sata (C), leaves on September 20, 2011 a polling station after inspecting voting procedures in Lusaka during national elections.
The leader of the Zambian opposition Patriotic Front (PF), Michael "King Cobra" Sata (C), leaves on September 20, 2011 a polling station after inspecting voting procedures in Lusaka during national elections.

Partial results from Zambia's presidential election show main challenger Michael Sata holding a lead over incumbent Rupiah Banda.

The Electoral Commission of Zambia said Wednesday that with ballot counting still in progress, Sata of the Patriotic Front party had captured about 42 percent of the vote. Banda of the Movement for Multiparty Democracy was second with 35 percent.

Hakainde Hichilema of the UPND party was third with 18 percent.

The commission said the count stemmed from results in 133 out of Zambia's 150 constituencies.

Pre-election surveys suggested a close race between President Banda and Sata, who is making his fourth run for the presidency.

Scattered incidents of violence were reported Tuesday in the capital, Lusaka, but European Union election observers say the vote was conducted in a "correct" manner. EU chief election observer Maria Muniz described the election as fair and transparent.

Ahead of the poll, Sata accused the electoral commission of planning to rig the outcome using pre-marked ballots. The electoral commission denied that allegation.

President Banda campaigned on a record of several years of strong economic growth in copper-rich Zambia, which has benefited from a boom in global commodity prices. Sata's Patriotic Front accused Banda of tolerating corruption and not doing enough to ensure that more Zambians share in the wealth of the country's copper reserves.

Banda defeated Sata by two percentage points in a 2008 special election to complete the term of late President Levy Mwanawasa, who had died of a stroke.

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