MAPUTO, Mozambique — Mozambique began counting votes late Wednesday in a presidential election that is expected to extend the ruling party's 49 years in power, though the opposition was already alleging fraud and manipulation.
Independent candidate Venancio Mondlane, a newcomer to national politics, posed the biggest challenge to the governing party's candidate, Daniel Chapo.
Mondlane and the two other challengers raised concerns over the election's fairness, claiming among other things that ballot boxes had been unsealed before voting ended and that some of their delegates were denied accreditation to monitor the voting.
''I trust the electoral process, but not the people deployed to run the election,'' Mondlane said.
The governing Front for the Liberation of Mozambique, or Frelimo, has routinely denied that it rigs elections following allegations of tampering in previous votes. The leftist former liberation movement has been in power in the southern African country since independence from Portugal in 1975.
Chapo, 47, seeks to succeed President Filipe Nyusi, who has served a maximum two terms.
But the 50-year-old Mondlane has invigorated disaffected youth in a country blessed with rich natural resources, but weighed down by instability, climate shocks and unemployment.
People also voted for the makeup of Parliament and for provincial governors in the country of around 33 million people that still bears the scars of a 15-year civil war that ended in 1992, and more recently has been shaken by an ongoing violent jihadi insurgency in the north.