Namibia will vote in Africa's first electronic ballot on Friday in a poll that will usher in a new president and quotas to put more women in government, after opposition's plea against using Indian-made e-voting machines was dismissed.
Opposition parties had launched an 11th-hour challenge to the use of the Indian-made e-voting machines, claiming the lack of a paper trail could open the door to vote rigging.
But the Windhoek High Court dismissed the application today, leaving the door open for the election to go ahead as planned.
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Around 1.2 million Namibians are eligible to cast their ballots at nearly 4,000 electronic voting stations across the vast desert nation.
But there is only one likely winner.
Current Prime Minister Hage Geingob of the ruling SWAPO party has run on a platform of "peace, stability and prosperity" and is sure to become the new president.
The South West Africa People's Organisation was forged from the embers of the anti-colonial and anti-apartheid struggle and has won every election since Namibia's independence from South Africa in 1990.
"I was born SWAPO," said Hosea, a Windhoek student who vowed to vote for the centre-left party of liberation.
According to pollsters, the party remains hugely popular.
The question will be whether discontent over social and economic issues will eat into SWAPO's support, eroding its 75 percent haul garnered in 2009.
Single mother of four Gredula Nashima, 39, said she will vote for SWAPO again this time, but wants to see change.
Sitting in the dirt outside her zinc panel shack by a pile of bones, she talks about unemployment, poor housing and a lack of electricity as she artfully, but violently butchers cows heads with an axe.
Hacking and smashing at the skulls, she renders the meat to small strips that are hung on a clothesline to be dried and sold, or made into "kapana" -- slices of grilled meat. The leftover bones are sold to a fertiliser company.
"We want to see our leader, whoever will be in the seat, to look at our living conditions, our roads are not tarred, but we also want help for those who have their own businesses," she said.
Like many Namibians she remains sceptical about opposition parties and their motives.
"I don't know their intentions and their objectives. If I did know I would be with them," she said.
The opposition had called for the election to be delayed until February.