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World / Africa

Seven to run for Central African Republic president

Published: 14 Nov 2025 - 09:19 pm | Last Updated: 14 Nov 2025 - 09:21 pm

AFP

Bangui, Central African Republic: Seven candidates have been approved to stand in the Central African Republic's December presidential election, including current leader Faustin Archange Touadera and two leading critics, the electoral body said on Friday.

The opposition has accused Touadera, who was first elected in 2016, of wishing to cling on as president-for-life in the unstable former French colony by running for a third term -- which was made possible by a 2023 change in the constitution.

Both of his top critics on the ballot paper, ex-prime minister Henri-Marie Dondra and the main opposition leader Anicet-Georges Dologuele, had feared they would be barred from the election over nationality requirements.

Dologuele, who had previously made a tilt for the top job in 2020, had given up his French nationality in August to conform with the requirement -- also imposed by the 2023 constitutional tinkering -- for candidates to hold only one citizenship.

But months after he abandoned his French citizenship, the courts stripped him of Centrafrican passport in mid-October, prompting Dologuele to file a complaint to the United Nations human rights office on Wednesday.

Three candidates were scrubbed off the ballot paper on the grounds that they did not fulfil all the necessary conditions, the electoral body's chair, Jean-Pierre Ouaboue said.

A leading opposition coalition, the Republican Bloc for the Defence of the Constitution of March 2016, announced in early October that it would boycott the election, accusing Touadera's government of rigging the vote.

Some 2.3 million voters are expected to cast their ballots on December 28, according to the national election authority.

Besides the presidential palace, seats are up for grabs in the national parliament, as well as in municipal and regional councils.

Since independence from France in 1960, the CAR has seen a succession of conflicts, civil wars and military coups.

Despite a gradual decrease in the intensity of violence in recent years, the security situation remains volatile, especially on main roads and in the east of the country bordering Sudan and South Sudan.