Violence and accusations as Ivory Coast voting ends

ABIDJAN, (Reuters) – Voters in Ivory Coast awaited  the outcome of a presidential run-off on Sunday meant to end a  decade of instability, but reports of violence and accusations  of voter intimidation created an atmosphere of tension and fear.

The electoral commission said it had finished counting  ballots after the polls closed at nightfall but would not make  the result public until until today.

Incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo faces Alassane Ouattara,  a former prime minister and senior IMF official, in a tight race  that has triggered conflict and rekindled simmering tension in  the world’s biggest cocoa grower.

Five members of the security forces were killed in the west  of the country, shortly before vote counting got under way,  according to Pascal Affi N’Guessan, Gbagbo’s campaign manager.

Two security sources said the killings took place outside  three different polling stations where angry Ivorians complained  of being blocked from voting.

Ivory Coast has been divided since a 2002-2003 civil war  left rebels in charge of the north, and unrest has wreaked havoc  on what had been a West African economic success.

The election is meant to heal that divide, and the first  round took place in a good-natured atmosphere on Oct. 31.

But that has given way to a heated contest in the run-off  between the top two candidates. At least seven other people have  been killed in the run-up to the vote.

Election observers held late evening talks with U.N. mission  chief Y.J. Choi after reports of irregularities emerged.

“We have some concerns,” the head of the E.U. mission,  Cristian Dan Preda, told Reuters by telephone. He said there  were reports of “roadblocks, tensions in the polling booths, a  lack of materials” which were not reported in the first round.

As counting began, groups of the rivals’ supporters gathered  outside many polling stations along the wide boulevards of the  lagoon-side city of Abidjan.