The Borneo Post

Early count : Ex-guerrilla wins E. Timor presidenti­al poll

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DILI, East Timor: A former guerrilla fighter has won East Timor’s presidenti­al election in just one round, an early count indicated Tuesday, in a sign of growing stability for Asia’s youngest nation.

With most ballots counted, Francisco Guterres – known by his nom de guerre ‘Lu Olo’ – had received over 57 percent of votes cast in Monday’s poll, according to election officials.

That is comfortabl­y above the 50 per cent plus one vote needed to avoid a run- off and clinch the largely ceremonial post.

“This is what I was expecting, which is Lu Olo won in the first round and that there won’t be a run- off,” said Mari Alkatiri, secretary- general of the Fretilin party which is led by Guterres.

Guterres’s closest rival, Education Minister Antonio de Conceicao, was on 32 per cent in a crowded field of eight candidates, said Acilino Manuel Branco, head of the body overseeing the logistics of the election process.

If final results confirm his victory, Guterres will be sworn in as president in May at a challengin­g time for the tiny half-island nation 15 years after it gained independen­ce following Indonesia’s brutal occupation.

Key oil reserves are running dry and the government is struggling to resolve a long-running row with Australia over lucrative energy fields.

It will be the first time since 2002

This is what I was expecting, which is Lu Olo won in the first round and that there won’t be a run-off.

Mari Alkatiri, secretary-general of the Fretilin party

that a presidenti­al election in the country has been decided in just one round, if the final results due in several days confirm Guterres has won.

As well as Fretilin, the country’s second- biggest party, the excombatan­t had the key backing of independen­ce hero Xanana Gusmao and his CNRT, the largest party in East Timor.

Analysts said the unified candidacy and Guterres’s strong first-round showing boosted stability for a country repeatedly rocked by outbreaks of violence in its short history.

“A strong vote in favour of a candidate is positive,” Damien Kingsbury, an East Timor expert from Australia’s Deakin University who was in the country as an election observer, told AFP.

 ??  ?? An election official empties a ballot box during the counting process of the presidenti­al elections in Dili. — Reuters photo
An election official empties a ballot box during the counting process of the presidenti­al elections in Dili. — Reuters photo

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