Bangkok Post

Djukanovic favourite as country votes for president

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PODGORICA: Voters in Montenegro were casting ballots yesterday in a presidenti­al election, with former Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic expected to win after his party defied Russia and took the small Balkan nation into NATO last year.

The vote is the first since Montenegro joined the Western military alliance in December. It’s seen as a test for Mr Djukanovic, who favours European integratio­n over closer ties to traditiona­l ally Moscow.

Mr Djukanovic, the country’s dominant politician, and his Democratic Party of Socialists have ruled Montenegro for nearly 30 years. President Filip Vujanovic of that party is not running due to term limits.

About 530,000 voters can choose among several candidates in the Adriatic Sea nation.

Mr Djukanovic’s main challenger is Mladen Bojanic, backed by several opposition groups, including pro-Russian ones. Lawmaker Draginja Vuksanovic is the first-ever female presidenti­al candidate in the staunchly conservati­ve, male-dominated society.

Polls suggest Mr Djukanovic, 56, could win more than half of the votes yesterday and avoid a runoff. Analysts say Mr Djukanovic seeks a first-round triumph to cement his leadership.

Mr Djukanovic was prime minister during a tense October 2016 parliament­ary election when authoritie­s said they thwarted pro-Russian coup attempt designed to prevent the country from joining NATO.

He led Montenegro to independen­ce from much-larger Serbia in 2006 and was behind the NATO bid. He hopes next to steer the country into the European Union.

Mr Bojanic, an economic expert and former lawmaker, has accused the ruling party of corruption and links to organised crime. The fractured opposition parties supporting Mr Bojanic include the proRussian Democratic Front, whose two main leaders are on trial for taking part in the alleged 2016 coup attempt.

Two Russian citizens also are being tried in absentia for the plot, which prosecutor­s said included a plan to assassinat­e Mr Djukanovic. The Kremlin has denied involvemen­t.

Voter Zdravko Ivanovic, 84, praised Mr Djukanovic’s leadership upon leaving a polling station yesterday in Podgorica, the capital. He described Mr Djukanovic as “the best statesman and prime minister, the best and finest Montenegri­n giant’’.

But Radmila Cagorovic, a voter in her late 50s, disagreed. “We have waited so long for a change. I hope it will happen today’’, she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People cast their votes in the village of Bijelo Polje near Podgorica, Montenegro, yesterday to elect their next president.
REUTERS People cast their votes in the village of Bijelo Polje near Podgorica, Montenegro, yesterday to elect their next president.

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