The Borneo Post

Fiji PM on track for election win

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SUVA, Fiji: Fiji Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a appeared set for a comfortabl­e election victory Thursday after only the second vote in the South Pacific island nation since a military takeover in 2006.

Preliminar­y results with almost three- quarters of votes counted gave Bainimaram­a’s FijiFirst Party an outright majority of 51.63 per cent, well ahead of nearest rival the Sodelpa Party on 38.05 per cent.

An election winner may not be known for several days as votes trickle in from polling stations on the archipelag­o’s more remote islands.

Election officials also have to arrange alternativ­e voting arrangemen­ts for constituen­ts affected when torrential rain on Wednesday forced the closure of 23 polling stations.

Bainimaram­a, 64, led the bloodless coup 12 years ago but now declares himself a convert to democracy, vowing to end the instabilit­y that saw four government­s toppled between 1987 and 2006.

The island nation of 920,000 people has enjoyed sustained growth in its tourism-reliant economy under his watch.

He has also made Fiji’s foreign policy less reliant on Australia and New Zealand, which both tried to isolate his regime when he seized power, allowing China an increased role in aid and developmen­t.

Supporters say he has helped heal racial divisions by introducin­g equal rights for Indian-Fijians, a sizable minority brought in to work on sugar plantation­s during British colonial rule.

But critics, including Amnesty Internatio­nal, say some democratic fundamenta­ls such as media freedom and the right to assembly remain inadequate under Bainimaram­a, who is notoriousl­y sensitive to criticism. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows a resident walking past election posters in the Fijian capital of Suva. — AFP photo
This file photo shows a resident walking past election posters in the Fijian capital of Suva. — AFP photo

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