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Race for Benin's Presidency Wide Open
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=EE3CB9:3919ACA

New presidential candidates join field to replace President Mathieu
Kerekou, who decided not to seek re-election





Mathieu Kerekou (2001 photo)Benin's presidential campaign is shaping
up to be a free-for-all, as new candidates join the field to replace
the aging ruler who decided not to seek re-election.

President Mathieu Kerekou surprised many in July when he rejected
calls by his supporters to modify the constitution that disqualified
him from another term and run again. As he put it then, "if you do not
leave power, there will come a day when power leaves you."

A 70-year constitutional age limit on candidates also disqualifies his
long-time political rival, former President Nicephore Soglo, who
defeated Mr. Kerekou in 1996 elections. Mr. Kerekou subsequently
regained the office he had previously held for 19 years as a Marxist.
The second time around, Mr. Kerekou ran as a born-again Christian.

The field of candidates for the March presidential poll keeps growing.

The latest addition is Speaker of Parliament Antoine Kolawole Idji,
who announced earlier this week he is a candidate. Others include the
son of former President Soglo, Lehady Soglo, who is an assistant to
the mayor of the capital Cotonou and an expert in taekwondo.

The list also includes a woman - a successful lawyer and former
commerce minister, Marie Elise Gbedo.

Two coalitions of small political parties are hoping well-known
bankers, Bruno Amoussou and Boni Yayi, will join the race and
represent them in the election.

Cotonou journalist, Gerard Guedegbe, says the election could be
exciting.

"In Benin, you should know that this presidential election is now one
for the Beninese to have a new future," said Gerard Guedegbe. "People
are waiting for it because they say so far all the politicians they
have seen have failed. They did not give Benin a good economic
situation. Now they're looking for a new president that can have that,
and that can still give them hope of living in a very secure land."

Unlike nearby Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria, Benin
has been calm in recent years, even as cotton production dwindled and
the country continued to slide into poverty.

Pro-democracy activists in Africa have applauded Mr. Kerekou's
decision not to follow in the footsteps of his counterparts in
countries like Guinea, Gabon, Chad and Uganda, who changed the
constitution in order to stay in power.