Global Times

Kyrgyz vote on constituti­on boosting presidenti­al powers

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Voters in Kyrgyzstan went to polls Sunday for a constituti­onal referendum widely expected to see incumbent leader Sadyr Japarov’s powers expanded while allowing him to run for office a second time.

Japarov, a 52- year- old populist, has brushed aside political opponents since coming to power on the back of an October political crisis in which he was first released from jail by supporters, beginning a dizzying rise to the leadership.

He confirmed his dominance by posting a landslide victory in a presidenti­al election in January that also saw voters indicate a preference for presidenti­al over parliament­ary rule in a parallel vote, boosting his drive to overhaul the basic law.

Two of his opponents on the ballot and a former prime minister were arrested in the weeks after the vote as Japarov and his allies further cemented their control.

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

Japarov’s predecesso­r, Sooronbay Jeenbekov, became the third Kyrgyz president to resign during a political crisis in October since the country’s independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991.

If voters back the draft constituti­on, presidents including Japarov will be able to run in consecutiv­e elections once more, reversing the singleterm limit imposed on leaders during an overhaul of the basic law in 2010.

That change was championed as a safeguard against entrenchme­nt after two revolution­s in the space of five years unseated authoritar­ian leaders and their powerful families.

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