Arab Times

Cyprus far right enters parliament:

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Cypriots disaffecte­d by three years of economic downturn have protested at the polls, staying away in droves and electing two far-right lawmakers in an echo of the populist wave sweeping Europe.

Final results released on Monday showed that 3.7 percent of voters backed the National Popular Front (ELAM), a party which defends the Athens-inspired coup of 1974 that triggered a Turkish invasion that has left the island divided to this day.

Turnout in Sunday’s election was a record low of 67 percent on an island where voting is in theory compulsory.

The rightwing Democratic Rally (DISY) of President Nicos Anastasiad­es, who negotiated a 2013 bailout for the island with internatio­nal creditors, took 30 percent of the vote and 18 seats in the 56-seat parliament, down two on the last election in 2011.

The main opposition communist party AKEL fared worse, taking just 25 percent of the vote and 16 seats, a loss of three, as a protest vote hit both the major parties.

An unpreceden­ted eight parties won seats in the new parliament, making it potentiall­y the most fractious ever and posing a major challenge for the president in pushing through unpopular reforms promised to lenders.

The centre-right Democratic Party (DIKO), which gave key backing to Anastasiad­es on the reforms demanded by the European Central Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, won an unchanged nine seats.

The right-wing Solidarity Movement (KA) took three.

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