The Republic of Congo votes in presidential elections tomorrow with incumbent Denis Sassou Nguesso aiming to extend his decades-long hold on power in the Central African state. 
Sassou Nguesso has accumulated 36 years in office – he was most recently re-elected in 2016, after which the opposition was effectively sidelined and his two main rivals sentenced to 20 years’ forced labour.
The 77-year-old retired general appears favoured to win a fourth term in Sunday’s ballot. The largest opposition group, the Pan-African Union for Social Democracy, is already boycotting the ballot. Sassou Nguesso hopes for a first-round victory over six challengers, including former minister Guy-Brice Parfait Kolelas who was runner-up in 2016.
“One shot, KO,” proclaimed his campaign posters forecasting a win for the candidate.
Sassou Nguesso has placed youth and the development of agriculture at the heart of his campaign, decrying it “shameful” that the country imports most of what it consumes despite its farming resources. But his pitch to youth seems to have raised a mixed response in a country where most of the population of 5mn are people aged under 25 who have never known another president.
“Even if there is some hassle here, there’s no war like in other countries. Better to stay with Sassou who brings us peace, at least that is good,” said Mariela, a 19-year-old high-school student in the coastal city of Pointe-Noire. 
“There’s no point voting,” said Francesc, a 25-year-old law student in the capital Brazzaville. “The dice are loaded in advance.”
Sitting between Gabon and its giant neighbour the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo has significant oil reserves and 80% of its budget comes from petroleum. But the former French colony, also known as Congo-Brazzaville, has been hit hard by cycles of falling world crude prices and is also hobbled by corruption and poor infrastructure. Per-capita GDP in 2012, at the height of an oil boom, peaked at $3,922, but tumbled to $2,279 in 2019, according to World Bank figures. 
Last year, the economy contracted by 6.8%, according to the African Development Bank (AfDB). In the 2020 UN Human Development Index, a benchmark of poverty, the country ranked 175 out of 189 countries. “Sassou has been in power for 37 years. He has no impact. We want some change,” said one man waiting for hours for a freight train to travel 18km in the Pool region, a stronghold of opposition candidate Guy-Brice Parfait Kolelas.
“I am 51 years old. When he came to power I was 10 years old.”
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