Bangkok Post

Anti-graft centre-right party wins vote

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BRATISLAVA: Slovak voters handed a resounding victory to the centre-right, anti-graft OLaNO opposition party in Saturday’s general election, dominated by an angry backlash over the 2018 murder of a journalist probing corruption in the eurozone state.

Having vowed to immediatel­y push through anti-corruption measures when in office, OLaNO leader Igor Matovic galvanised voter outrage over the murder of Jan Kuciak and his fiancee, and the high-level graft their deaths exposed.

Allegedly a hit ordered by a businessma­n with connection­s to politician­s, the killings have become a lightning rod for public outrage at graft in public life.

“People want us to clean up Slovakia.

They want us to make Slovakia a fair country where laws will apply to everyone,” Mr Matovic told reporters as near full results showed his party had skyrockete­d to victory.

“It was the death of Jan Kuciak and Martina Kusnirova that woke up Slovakia,” he said, vowing later in the night that his administra­tion will have “zero tolerance for corruption”.

Outgoing Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini conceded defeat as near full partial results showed OLaNO outpacing his populist-left Smer-SD by six percentage points.

“Congratula­tions to the election winner, good health, good luck,” Mr Pellegrini told Mr Matovic, adding, “he has good marketing, but we will be interested in how he will handles his office.”

OLaNO took 24.96% for 52 seats and could possibly clinch a majority of 77 or more in the 150-member parliament, near full results showed.

Mr Matovic said he would seek talks with the We Are Family conservati­ves who scored 8.26% for 17 seats as well as the liberal Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) party and the fellow liberal “For the People” party of ex-president Andrej Kiska — which got 13 and 12 seats respective­ly.

The governing populist-left Smer-SD party won 18.39% support and 39 seats, while the far-right Our Slovakia LSNS got 17 seats.

The result suggests Smer-SD lacks

Iranian producer Farzad Pak holds a phone displaying Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof who was awarded the ‘Golden Bear for Best Film’ in Berlin on Saturday. obvious coalition partners as it has ruled out teaming up with LSNS.

Mr Matovic meanwhile said he would not cooperate with Smer-SD.

“No way. We don’t negotiate with the mafia,” Mr Matovic said, in response to a quip from Mr Pellegrini on the possibilit­y of cooperatio­n.

Analysts suggest that OLaNO’s Matovic, a 46-year-old media-savvy but unpredicta­ble politician, could become premier if he can unify the splintered opposition.

Mr Matovic told reporters that he had agreed by phone to meet with President Zuzana Caputova on “Monday or Tuesday” and that he would begin talks with leaders of other opposition parties that made it into parliament yesterday.

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