Sri Lanka presidential election: All you need to know
Polling begins at 7 am and ends at 4 pm (nine hours of polling) on Saturday, September 21
Sri Lanka presidential election will be held on Saturday (September 21) with incumbent Ranil Wickremesinghe seeking re-election in a three-way battle.
President Wickremesinghe, the main Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa and the Marxist JVP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake are the front-runners in the election which has 38 candidates, the largest ever pool in the history of the island nation.
Here is all you need to know about the Sri Lanka Presidential election.
Polling begins at 7 am and ends at 4 pm (nine hours of polling) on Saturday, September 21
Total electorate: Over 17 million (17,140,354)
Number of candidates on ballot paper: 39 (one died but his name remains there)
Number of women candidates: 0
Number of polling stations: 13,421
Number of election officials: More than 225,000
Number of police personnel on duty: 63,000
Estimated cost of election: Over 10 billion Sri Lankan rupees ($33 million)
The voters are eligible to vote at the election for a direct vote to elect an executive president for a 5-year term
This will be the first election since the worst economic crisis in the country in 73 years
The President of Sri Lanka is elected using a preferential voting system, whereby voters can rank up to three candidates in order of preference
A total of 116 representatives from various international election observation organisations have arrived in Sri Lanka to monitor the election
Empty boxes and sealed packages of ballots will be kept at district secretariats (in 22 electoral districts)) overnight. Counting begins soon after the voting ends but results will come from about Sunday morning (September 22) due to the long and slow process of manual counting
The country is divided into 160 polling divisions. The results will be issued from different polling divisions
The counting of postal votes, that is the ballots of officials involved in the election, will begin within 15 minutes of the polling stations closing
The final tallies will be known towards Sunday morning. No timeline for this. If no candidate gets 50 per cent, then there will be the counting of second preferences
In the Presidential election of 2019, the voter turnout was 83.72 per cent