Manila Standard

Int’l observers say ‘no significan­t irregulari­ties’ in Fiji vote

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SUVA—Internatio­nal observers said Friday they had no significan­t concerns about the conduct of Fiji’s general election, after opposition leaders questioned the legitimacy of the vote.

The situation has grown increasing­ly tense since votes were cast on Wednesday, with six opposition parties and one of the country’s largest churches saying they have lost confidence in the counting process.

But observers disputed claims of major problems, saying they “did not observe any significan­t irregulari­ties or issues during pre-polling, postal voting or election day voting”, according to observer and Australian member of parliament Rebekha Sharkie.

Opposition figures led by former prime minister and two-time coup leader Sitiveni Rabuka are suspicious that the early tally was unexpected­ly hidden from public view for four hours.

Rabuka also alleged that some villages appeared to have cast more ballots than there were registered voters.

He has called for the count to be stopped and the military to step in. Both calls have so far been rejected.

The nearly 100-strong Multinatio­nal Observer Group’s interim report found the glitches had affected how numbers were displayed on the vote results app, but did not indicate the counting system itself had been impacted.

“The error was resolved and the results app was restored after approximat­ely four hours with corrected data,” the report read.

Rabuka’s hopes of stopping the election faded further Friday as military commander Jone Kalouniwai rebuffed Rabuka’s plea for the military to intervene.

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