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Minggu, 26 April 2015

Kazakh leader on course for crushing election victory

Kazakh leader on course for crushing election victory

  • 5 hours ago
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  • From the sectionAsia


Main Kazakh presidential candidate Nursultan Nazarbayev walks to casts his ballot at a polling station in Astana (26 April 2015)
Mr Nazarbayev cast his ballot to loud cheering in the capital Astana, saying he was sure that the people of Kazakhstan would support his campaign

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev is on course for a crushing election victory, with exit polls showing him to have won 97.5% of the vote.
The country's Central Election Commission said that there had been a record turnout of 95.11% for the poll.
The result - with Mr Nazarbayev set for a fifth consecutive term - has never been in doubt.
The president has promised economic and social stability in the oil-rich Central Asian state.
His two opponents are both seen as pro-government.
Human rights groups accuse the authorities of systematically repressing the opposition as President Nazarbayev looks likely to extend his 26-year rule by another five years.

'Stable development'

Mr Nazarbayev cast his ballot to loud cheering in the capital Astana, saying he was sure that the people of Kazakhstan would support his campaign.


A Kazakh man casts his vote in the country's presidential elections at a polling station in Astana (26 April 2015)
Correspondents say that the vote has taken place against a faltering economy in recent months
Members of a local electoral commission empty a ballot box after the polls closed for the presidential elections in Astana (26 April 2015)
Elections had been due in 2016, but President Nazarbayev announced they would be held a year early in what some see as a move intended to halt speculation about any possible successor

"I am sure Kazakhstan's people will vote primarily for the stable development of our state and the improvement of people's lives, as well as the stability of the state and in support of the policies the country has implemented under my leadership," he told journalists.
"I am confident of this."
Many voters waited in long queues at polling stations in Astana and in the largest city Almaty - with many citing a "civic duty" to vote.
Correspondents say that the vote has taken place against a faltering economy in recent months in Kazakhstan, which is the richest of the five former Soviet Central Asian states.
Domestic producers have been dismissing workers as they struggle to compete against Russian imports made cheaper by the weakening of the sanctions-hit rouble.
Elections had been due in 2016, but President Nazarbayev, 74, announced they would be held a year early in what some see as a move intended to halt speculation about any possible successor.
A former Communist politburo member, Mr Nazarbayev has been president of Kazakhstan since before it became independent in 1991 following the break-up of the former Soviet Union.
Some 9.5 million people were eligible to vote in the vast country, which has extensive borders with both Russia and China.


Official prepares a voting station in Astana
Nearly 10 million Kazakhs were eligible to vote
Copied from:
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-32471428

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