The Phnom Penh Post

East Timor votes in presidenti­al election

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EAST TIMOR’S citizens were at the polls on March 19 to elect a new president, hoping the most competitiv­e election in the history of Southeast Asia’s youngest country will end a protracted political impasse.

Voters lined up outside polling stations at the crack of dawn to choose between a record 16 candidates led by two revolution­ary heroes in incumbent Francisco “Lu-Olo” Guterres and former president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Jose Ramos-Horta.

Following temperatur­e checks and hand sanitisati­on, they were ushered to the polling booths where they dabbed their fingers in ink to show they had voted. Several mothers carrying babies were among those eager to elect a new president.

“I hope the leader that I have voted for can pay more attention to the education, infrastruc­ture and farming sectors. I am very happy that I’ve voted for a candidate based on my consciousn­ess,” 35-year-old Filomena Tavares Maria said outside the polls that opened at 7am (2200 GMT) and shut at 3pm.

Preliminar­y results are expected later on March 19 but an official result will be announced sometime next week.

First hammered by the pandemic, East Timor’s economy

took another hit last year when Cyclone Seroja struck, killing at least 40 people on its half of the island and transformi­ng communitie­s into wastelands of mud and uprooted trees.

Political tensions between the two largest parties – Guterres’ Revolution­ary Front for an Independen­t East Timor (Fretilin) and the National Congress of the Reconstruc­tion of Timor-Leste

(CNRT) – have also risen in the past four years, leading to a political deadlock that has seen the government fail to pass a budget.

Sidalia dos Santos said she hoped the new president could

lead an economic recovery.

“I hope the candidate that I voted for can improve our lives, especially in the health and education sector,” the 22year-old student said.

Outside the polling station,

Ramos-Horta said the financial situation would be his main priority: “The most important thing for me is to strengthen the stability and build a better economy”.

Earlier in the week, he said he felt compelled to return to politics because Guterres had “breached the constituti­on” and oversteppe­d his presidenti­al role.

But Guterres, a 67-year-old former guerilla fighter, said he was confident the elections would bring him a second term.

“I believe I will win this election and people will reconfirm their rights through the election. If I am re-elected, I will keep defending the democratic rights of our country and create sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

Around 860,000 were registered to vote at the country’s 1,500 polling stations.

If no one wins an absolute majority, a second round of voting will be held on April 19 and the winner will take office on May 20, East Timor’s 20th anniversar­y of independen­ce from Indonesia, which occupied the former Portuguese colony for 24 years.

Major political events in East Timor have often been marred by violence and conflicts.

In 2018, more than a dozen people were injured and several cars torched after clashes between main parties Fretilin and CNRT.

 ?? AFP ?? East Timor’s incumbent President Francisco Guterres, known as Lu’Olo, and First Lady Cidalia Lopes Guterres gesture after casting their ballots during a presidenti­al election in Dili on Saturday.
AFP East Timor’s incumbent President Francisco Guterres, known as Lu’Olo, and First Lady Cidalia Lopes Guterres gesture after casting their ballots during a presidenti­al election in Dili on Saturday.

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