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Bainimaram­a’s party leads with a narrow margin

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Fiji prime minister narrowly wins election to serve a second term.

suva: Fijian Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a will stay in power for a second term as he narrowly won a general election after voting resumed following delays due to bad weather.

Bainimaram­a’s Fiji First party led with about 50% of the votes, closely followed by nearly 40% for opposition Social Democratic Liberal Party (SODELPA), according to the Fiji Elections Office (FEO).

Bainimaram­a, who has been the Prime Minister of Fiji since leading a bloodless coup in 2006, has won 27 of 51 seats, according to the electoral commission.

“I’m proud to become your prime minister once again,” Bainimaram­a told FBC News from Auckland, New Zealand, yesterday where he had been attending his brother’s funeral.

SODELPA, which won 21 seats, and three other losing parties urged the electoral commission and the FEO to refrain from officially announcing results, saying the tally process was not transparen­t.

Fiji went to polls last Wednesday, only the second time the country has held democratic elections since 2006.

“The supervisor of elections has been in a great hurry to get the results out,” Mahendra Chaudhry of the Fiji Labor Party said on Facebook Live video, along with SODELPA, National Federation Party and Unity Fiji.

“He (the supervisor) has, in the process, compromise­d the procedures and the requiremen­t of the law, so that should be set right if this election is to have any credibilit­y,” Chaudhry said.

Elections Supervisor Mohammed Saneem said in response that the authoritie­s had been open.

“The people of Fiji deserve better in terms of informatio­n.

And the Fiji Elections Office is giving all the informatio­n accurately in a timely manner,” Saneem said, also on Facebook Live. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Democracy at play: Fijians waiting in line to cast their votes in the nation’s second election since a 2006 military coup. — AFP
Democracy at play: Fijians waiting in line to cast their votes in the nation’s second election since a 2006 military coup. — AFP

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