Kuwait Times

East Timor votes in presidenti­al election seen as sign of stability

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DILI: East Timor voted for a new president yesterday, with a former guerrilla fighter tipped for victory after winning the backing of the two biggest parties, in a new sign of stability for Asia’s youngest nation. The vote comes at a challengin­g time for the tiny half-island nation 15 years after independen­ce, with oil reserves running dry and its leaders struggling to reach agreement with Australia over lucrative energy fields.

It is the first presidenti­al election since the departure of United Nations peacekeepe­rs in 2012. But despite fears of violence there has been only sporadic and low-level unrest in the run-up to the vote. Francisco Guterres-known by his nom de guerre “Lu-Olo”-is favourite to win the presidency, which is largely ceremonial but can have a key role in keeping the peace between feuding politician­s. He is leader of the second-biggest party Fretilin and also won the backing of independen­ce hero Xanana Gusmao and his CNRT party, the country’s largest.

“I am sure I will win, that there will be no second round,” Guterres, who is facing seven challenger­s for the presidency, said after casting his vote in the capital Dili. He will have to secure over 50 percent of the vote to avoid a run-off in April. Democratic Party politician Antonio da Conceicao is seen as his closest rival in the fourth presidenti­al election since East Timor gained independen­ce in 2002 following a brutal 24-year Indonesian occupation.

Current President Taur Matan Ruak is not seeking re-election. Analysts say Guterres’s unified candidacy will help stabilise a nation repeatedly rocked by bouts of violence. “That is good from the point of view of stability, because competitiv­e politics can raise tensions,” Damien Kingsbury, an East Timor expert from Australia’s Deakin University, told AFP.

Kingsbury said it suggests that the country will continue to be led by a unity government following parliament­ary elections later in the year. But he added that the absence of a viable opposition could raise concerns about government accountabi­lity.

Huge challenges

Guterres is from a humble family and like many members of East Timor’s political class took part in the bloody struggle against Indonesian occupation. He was Fretilin’s unsuccessf­ul candidate for presidenti­al polls in 2007. Vasco Pires de Jesus, a 58-year-old labourer, told AFP he was voting for him because “he is a fighter who fought alongside Xanana Gusmao in the forest to bring independen­ce to this country”. Whoever wins the vote will preside over a nation with huge challenges. — AFP

 ??  ?? DILI: People queue up to give their vote during the presidenti­al election at a polling station. —AP
DILI: People queue up to give their vote during the presidenti­al election at a polling station. —AP

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