Audio By Carbonatix
Liberia's President George Weah and his rival Joseph Boakai are neck and neck, with votes from nearly 73% of polling stations counted, provisional results show.
Mr Weah has 43.8% while Mr Boakai has 43.54% of the votes tallied so far, following the 10 October elections.
A run-off will be held if neither candidate gets more than 50%.
Mr Weah, a former football star, won a run-off in the 2017 poll with 61.5% to Mr Boakai's 38.5%.
He had won the first round with 38.4% of the vote, compared with Mr Boakai's 28.8%, suggesting that Mr Boakai is faring better in this election.
By Sunday, Liberia's elections commission had tallied votes from 4,295 of the 5,890 polling stations.
The body has 15 days from the date of the election to announce the final results. If there is no outright winner, a run-off will be held on 7 November.
More than 2.4 million Liberians, many of them first-time voters born after the 1989-2003 civil wars, had registered to elect the president, members of the House of Representatives and half the Senate.
Local and regional election observers reported peaceful polls and a high turnout across the country, but cited problems such as voting delays at some polling stations.
Despite the slow announcement of results, the West African regional bloc Ecowas, of which Liberia is a member, has asked Liberians to "continue to exercise maximum restraint as they wait for official provisional results".
Ecowas also said that it was aware of "attempts by some Liberian stakeholders to declare premature victories or put undue pressure on the National Elections Commission".
It warned that such groups would be held "accountable for any actions that may lead to violence and instability".
Liberia is recovering from the brutal civil wars that ended two decades ago, after killing an estimated 250,000 people.
Analysts say this might be the last attempt at the presidency for 78-year-old Mr Boakai.
Mr Boakai, a former vice-president, has waged his campaign under the slogan "Rescue", arguing that the West African state went downhill during Mr Weah's first six years in office.
Mr Weah, 57, has dismissed Mr Boakai's claims, saying that he has made significant strides in his first term, including introducing free tuition for university students.
The secretary general of Mr Weah's ruling Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC) party, Jefferson Koijee, last week ruled out the possibility of Mr Weah losing, but said that the president would accept the result because "the peace of this country is above his own".
Latest Stories
-
Trump says Iran war deal close as Strait of Hormuz tensions linger
7 minutes -
Bawumia credits UK-Ghana Business Council for driving key investments
15 minutes -
UK High Commissioner commends Bawumia’s focus on policy-based politics
21 minutes -
Bawumia highlights strong UK-Ghana partnership after meeting British High Commissioner
28 minutes -
World Cup fever meets power anxiety: Ho residents plead for stable electricity
32 minutes -
Nii Lante Vanderpuye ready to contest NDC chairmanship if Asiedu Nketia steps aside
35 minutes -
Government to begin paying Free SHS suppliers’ arrears next week
38 minutes -
CSOs urge Supreme Court to uphold legality of Special Prosecutor’s office
41 minutes -
Mahama won’t shield Sedina Tamakloe from justice – Vanderpuye
44 minutes -
GMet proposes Authority status under new legislative framework
48 minutes -
Kpone Katamanso MCE condemns cattle invasion of school after viral video
51 minutes -
Speaker Bagbin calls for closer Parliament-Judiciary ties as Supreme Court marks 150 years
54 minutes -
World Blood Donor Day: Ghana celebrates humanity behind every drop of blood
57 minutes -
Mahama calls for new Ghana-EU partnership driven by trade, investment and industrialisation
60 minutes -
I’m not the president’s appointee; my allegiance is to MPs and Ghana – Speaker
1 hour