Central African Republic votes, Russia ally Touadera seeks third term


A man walks past a campaign billboard of President and presidential candidate Faustin-Archange Touadera, ahead of the presidential election scheduled for December 28, in Bangui, Central African Republic December 24, 2025. REUTERS/Leger Serge Kokpakpa

BANGUI Dec 28 (Reuters) - Central African Republic President Faustin-Archange Touadera is ‌seeking a third term on Sunday as the chronically unstable country holds national elections, touting security gains made with the help of Russian ‌mercenaries and Rwandan soldiers.

The 68-year-old mathematician oversaw a constitutional referendum in 2023 that scrapped the presidential term limit, drawing an outcry from his ‌critics who accused him of seeking to rule for life.

A Touadera victory - the expected outcome - would likely further the interests of Russia, which has traded security assistance for access to resources including gold and diamonds. Touadera is also offering access to the country's lithium and uranium reserves to anyone interested.

Polling stations opened on time at 6 a.m. (0500 GMT) in the capital, Bangui, a Reuters witness said. They ‍were due to close at 6 p.m. (1700 GMT), with provisional results expected by January 5. Nearly ‍2.4 million people were registered to vote.

Casting her ballot in Bangui, ‌shopkeeper Beatrice Mokonzapa said women had "suffered greatly" during Central African Republic's years of conflict but that the situation had improved.

"We have security today. I hope it ‍continues. ​And for that, President Touadera is best placed to guarantee our security," she said.

SIX OPPONENTS CHALLENGE TOUADERA

The opposition field of six candidates is led by two former prime ministers, Anicet-Georges Dologuele and Henri-Marie Dondra, both of whom survived attempts by Touadera's supporters to have them disqualified for allegedly holding foreign citizenship.

Though both ⁠men remain on the ballot, Touadera is still seen as the favourite given his control ‌over state institutions and superior financial resources, analysts say.

In an interview with Reuters on Wednesday, Dondra said the playing field was "unbalanced" and that he had been unable to travel as widely as ⁠Touadera to campaign. He nevertheless ‍predicted he would have a strong showing.

The challenges to the candidacies of Dologuele and Dondra "aligned with an apparent pattern of administrative manoeuvring that has disproportionately impeded opposition politicians while favouring the ruling United Hearts Party", Human Rights Watch said last month.

Voting in the capital early on Sunday, teacher Albert Komifea said he wanted a change, without specifying who he had backed.

"They did ‍everything they could to prevent the opposition from campaigning effectively, in order to reduce their ‌chances," he said. "But the ballot box will confirm that change is now."

RUSSIA AND RWANDA REINFORCE TOUADERA

In 2018, CAR became the first country in West and Central Africa to bring in Russia's Wagner mercenaries, a step since also taken by Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.

Two years later, Rwanda deployed troops to shore up Touadera's government as rebel groups threatened the capital and tried to disruptthe 2020 elections, ultimately preventing voting at 800 polling stations across the country, or 14% of the total.

The country is more secure now after Touadera signed several peace deals with rebel groups this year.

But those gains remain fragile: Rebels have not fully disarmed, reintegration is incomplete, and incursions by combatants from neighbouring Sudan fuel insecurity in the east.

Beyond the presidential contest, the elections on Sunday cover legislative, regional and municipal positions.

If no candidate gets more than 50% ‌of the vote, a presidential runoff will take place on February 15, while legislative runoffs will take place on April 5.

Pangea-Risk, a consultancy, wrote in a note to clients that the risk of unrest after the election was high as opponents were likely to challenge Touadera's expected victory.

A smooth voting process could reinforce Touadera's claim that stability is returning, which was buttressed last year with ​the U.N. Security Council's lifting of an arms embargo and the lifting of a separate embargo on diamond exports.

In November, the U.N. Security Council extended the mandate of its peacekeeping mission. The U.S. opposed the decision, calling for a shorter extension and a handover of security to Bangui.

(Reporting by Pacome Pabandji; Writing by Robbie Corey-Boulet; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Helen Popper)

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