LIVE REPORT
Polls close with an expected record turnout
5pm - Polls for the Kimanis by-election have closed. Counting has begun.
The final turnout will be announced later. However, turnout as of 4pm was 76.14 percent.
This means the final turnout will likely cross the 80 percent mark, making in the highest turnout for all the 10 by-elections since the 14th general election in 2018.
The last by-election to see a similarly high turnout was the Rantau by-election in April last year where 79.31 percent of the electorate there turned up to vote.
This concludes Malaysiakini's coverage of the Kimanis by-election polling process.
For our live coverage of the results, kindly click here.
Bung Moktar raises vote-buying suspicion
4.29pm - Sabah BN chief Bung Moktar Radin raises suspicion on vote-buying.
He claims BN activists spotted some 100 people queuing in front of a house in Bongawan, Kimanis.
"Around 100 people were queuing at a house today. I asked them (my party workers) to take pictures. I don't know if they (those queueing) got (inducement) or not," he says.
Pressed if it was money, Bung says he is unsure but questioned why people would queue in front of a house on polling day.
"We don't have proof because we weren't allowed in but we suspect (vote-buying), that's why we sent our lawyers to make a police report," he says.
BN pushing its supporters to vote
3.45pm - BN sources believe their "getting out the vote" (GOTV) efforts have seen more BN supporters going to the polls compared to the average turnout.
They estimate that BN supporters' turnout this time is around 7.5 percent higher than the average.
However, it still falls short of their targeted 80 percent turnout for what they consider as "white voters" (BN supporters).
There is slightly more than one hour of voting left before polls close.
Turnout exceeds 70 percent
3pm - The turnout for the Kimanis by-election stands at 70.20 percent.
The final turnout in the previous by-election in Tanjung Piai was 74.43 percent.
With two hours of voting left, the final turnout for Kimanis will likely exceed that of Tanjung Piai.
The turnout is also significantly higher than the Sandakan by-election.
Sandakan, which was the first by-election in Sabah after the 2018 general election, only saw a final turnout of 54.4 percent.
Shafie pleased with smooth election process
12.30pm - Sabah Chief Minister Mohd Shafie Apdal says he is pleased with the smooth voting process in Kimanis this morning.
He adds his hopes that the democratic process would take place calmly and efficiently to enable voters to discharge their responsibilities.
"We want everyone to vote and fulfil their responsibilities," he said when met at SK Kelatuan to monitor the Kimanis by-election.
The Election Commission announced that as of 12 noon, the voter turnout was at 50.37 percent.
EC: Four complaints of election violations during campaign
10.34am - The Election Commission tweets that it has received four complaints of election violations during the campaign up to 8am today.
Three are against BN for posting campaign material outside the Kimanis electoral boundary (one count) and campaign material that violates Section 4A of the Election Offence Act 1954 which covers material that promoting feelings of ill-will or hostility.
The fourth is against Parti Warisan Sabah for posting campaign material in a public space (a school).
Additionally, reports the EC, 28 police reports were filed over the campaign period.
The EC also reports a 31.22 percent voter turnout as at 10 am.
Shafie swings by
10.30am - Sabah Chief Minister and Warisan president Mohd Shafie Apdal pays a visit to the SMK Bongawan polling centre.
Shafie is going around as a pillion rider on a motorcycle.
Fence-sitter to vote based on current issues
10.30am - At SK Kimanis, the polling centre for Kimanis Estate, 31-year-old Asnidah Abas admits it is a dilemma for her to make a decision on whom to support.
The homemaker who resides in Sandakan is apparently a fence-sitter who will vote based on current issues.
Asnidah says she had voted for both BN and Warisan in the past.
"This time, my vote goes to Warisan, but not wholeheartedly," she says.
While noting Warisan has a good government, she says people on the ground feel the sting of inflation and the government is making things worse by cutting on expenses which used to help people.
She admits the Sabah Temporary Pass might be a good measure in terms of gathering data on migrants in the state.
She, however, raises concern that the PSS holders may be given citizenship.
Najib shares video of voter alleging bribe
9.30am - Ex-premier Najib Abdul Razak shares a Facebook post originally posted by Umno Youth chief Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki last night in which an elderly voter supposedly from Membakut alleges that he received RM385 from Warisan on the eve of the polling.
"I remember being told - take the money from Warisan but vote for BN," says the man in the video.