Times of Suriname

Singapore extends voting hours as pandemic slows poll

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SINGAPORE - Voting in Singapore’s election was extended on Friday, after coronaviru­s infection control measures led to long queues and delays at polling stations. Voting is mandatory in the affluent citystate, but many fretted about the risks as they lined up in masks for as long as an hour to cast their ballots, with jobs at the top of their agenda as the pandemic threatens to cause Singapore’s worst-ever recession. The People’s Action Party (PAP), in power since independen­ce in 1965, is expected by analysts to carry Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to another comfortabl­e, and probably final, victory. Lee, the 68-year-old son of Singapore’s founding leader Lee Kuan Yew, has been premier since 2004. He has already flagged his intention to step down in the next few years, but first wants a fresh mandate to overcome the coronaviru­s crisis.

As he queued to vote, a video widely shared on social media showed his wife tapping him on the shoulder to remind him to keep his distance when he strayed too close to the person in front. All around the city, election officials wearing visors enforced distancing rules and took voters’ temperatur­es. The delays convinced the election authority to drop a requiremen­t for voters to wear gloves, and by evening it had extended voting by two hours to 10 p.m. (1400 GMT). Since a coronaviru­s lockdown eased in June after two months, the number of new daily cases has crept back into double figures, excluding the migrant workers living in dormitorie­s where infection rates have been far higher.

“This is a very dangerous time to hold an election, even though many precaution­s were taken,” Mayank Goel, 21, a biomedical engineerin­g student, said after voting. Social distancing rules constraine­d campaignin­g, and no party rallies were allowed, but opposition parties and rights groups still warned that holding the election now could distract from government efforts to tackle the virus. (Reuters)

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