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Djibouti president wins election with 97.8% of vote, state media says

By Thomson Reuters Apr 11, 2026 | 3:26 AM

NAIROBI, April 11 (Reuters) – Djibouti’s President Ismael Omar Guelleh nL8N3W50Q9 has won re-election with 97.8% of the vote, state-owned Radio Television Djibouti said on Saturday, handing him a sixth term ​that extends his 27-year rule over the small but ‌strategically located East African country.

Guelleh posted an image of himself with the French word “RÉÉLU” on X, which translates to “re-elected”.

The country of less than 1 million people sits on the Gulf of Aden at the entrance to the Red Sea and ‌hosts ​U.S., Chinese, French, Italian and Japanese military bases. ⁠Since 2023, several commercial ⁠ships damaged nS8N3LN04I in attacks by Yemen’s Houthi militants nL1N40G020 have docked in the country.

Victory for the 78-year-old Guelleh, who was handpicked in 1999 to succeed his uncle Hassan Gouled Aptidon and whose ​party dominates national institutions, was never in doubt.

Last October, parliament voted to remove the 75-year age limit for presidential candidates and ⁠also scrapped a referendum previously required to ⁠approve a new constitution.

TWO MAIN OPPOSITION PARTIES BOYCOTTED ELECTION

In ​Friday’s vote, Guelleh faced a lone opposition candidate, Mohamed Farah Samatar, from ​a small party with no representation in parliament.

Two of ‌the main opposition parties have boycotted elections since 2016, accusing election authorities of lacking impartiality.

Data from state-owned media showed that there was voter turnout of 80.4%. In the last election in 2021, Guelleh won with ⁠over 97% https://www.reuters.com/world/djiboutis-president-guelleh-wins-fifth-term-with-97-votes-2021-04-10/ of the vote.

In contrast to several other Horn of Africa nations, Djibouti has been relatively stable in recent years, and Guelleh’s government has ⁠invested heavily in ‌port infrastructure to become the main gateway to ⁠landlocked Ethiopia.

But human rights groups accuse the Djiboutian authorities ​of ‌repressing political opponents, activists and journalists. The government ​has denied ⁠allegations of widespread abuses and rejected criticism of the electoral process.

In 2020, security forces quelled rare anti-government street protests, which erupted after the arrest of a former air force pilot who had denounced alleged corruption and clan-based discrimination.

(Reporting by George Obulutsa, Rhea Rose Abraham and Nelson Banya; Editing ​by Jan Harvey)