Bangkok Post

President given more power

-

BISHKEK: Voters in Kyrgyzstan granted sweeping powers to President Sadyr Japarov on Sunday in a constituti­onal referendum that will also allow him to run for re-election, preliminar­y results showed.

Mr Japarov, a 52-year-old populist, has brushed aside political opponents since coming to power on the back of a political crisis last October in the poor Central Asian country.

A disputed parliament­ary vote saw Mr Japarov’s predecesso­r, Sooronbay Jeenbekov, become the third Kyrgyz president to resign during a political crisis since the country’s independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991 as Mr Japarov won backing to lead from the political elite.

His release from jail by supporters was the spark for a dizzying rise to the leadership. He always described his conviction for hostage-taking — which has since been overturned — as politicall­y motivated.

On Sunday, with nearly all ballots counted, the constituti­onal changes were on course to pass with 79% in favour.

Turnout was low but at nearly 37% crossed the 30% barrier required for the referendum’s results to stand, the Central Election Commission said.

Mr Japarov had already confirmed his dominance over domestic politics in January, when he won the presidency in a landslide.

The president had appealed to voters to back the constituti­onal changes, claiming that previous revisions had been imported from abroad.

“This time we prepared the basic law ourselves,” Mr Japarov said as he cast his ballot at a polling station in the capital Bishkek.

The result promises a presidency more in line with Kyrgyzstan’s neighbours, with the office gaining new powers of appointmen­t at the expense of parliament and the head of cabinet, ending a decade-long experiment with a mixed system.

Local critics dubbed the hastily drafted document a “khanstitut­ion”, evoking the powerful patriarchs who ruled Central Asia in centuries gone by.

The Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe and the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission criticised the lack of “meaningful and inclusive public consultati­ons and debate in parliament” before the basic law was put to the people.

In a joint opinion published in March, the two bodies also raised fears over the “overly prominent role and prerogativ­es of the president”.

President Vladimir Putin of Russia, a key ally, expressed support for the constituti­onal drive in February when Mr Japarov went to Moscow in his first foreign visit, saying that he hoped it would bring stability to the country of 6.5 million.

As a result of the referendum, Kyrgyz presidents including Mr Japarov will be able to run for office for a second time, reversing the single-term limit imposed on leaders during an overhaul of the basic law in 2010.

 ??  ?? Japarov: Can run for a second time
Japarov: Can run for a second time

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand