Bangkok Post

E Timor holds presidenti­al ‘stability’ poll

Former guerrilla set for plebiscite victory

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DILI: East Timor voted for a new president yesterday, with a former guerrilla tipped for victory after winning the backing of the two biggest parties, in a new sign of stability for Asia’s youngest nation.

The vote comes at a challengin­g time for the tiny half-island nation 15 years after independen­ce, with oil reserves running dry and its leaders struggling to reach agreement with Australia over lucrative energy fields.

It is the first presidenti­al election since the departure of United Nations peacekeepe­rs in 2012. But despite fears of violence there has been only sporadic and low-level unrest in the run-up to the vote.

Francisco Guterres — known by his nom de guerre “Lu-Olo” — is favourite to win the presidency, which is largely ceremonial but can have a key role in keeping the peace between feuding politician­s.

He is leader of the second-biggest party Fretilin and also won the backing of independen­ce hero Xanana Gusmao and his CNRT party, the country’s largest.

“I am sure I will win, that there will be no second round,” Mr Guterres, who is facing seven challenger­s for the presidency, said after casting his vote in the capital Dili. He will have to secure over 50% of the vote to avoid a run-off in April.

Democratic Party politician Antonio da Conceicao is seen as his closest rival in the fourth presidenti­al election since East Timor gained independen­ce in 2002 following a brutal 24-year Indonesian occupation.

Current President Taur Matan Ruak is not seeking re-election.

Analysts say Mr Guterres’s unified candidacy will help stabilise a nation repeatedly rocked by bouts of violence.

“That is good from the point of view of stability because competitiv­e politics can raise tensions,” said Damien Kingsbury, an East Timor expert from Australia’s Deakin University.

Mr Kingsbury said it suggests that the country will continue to be led by a unity government following parliament­ary elections later in the year.

But he added that the absence of a viable opposition could raise concerns about government accountabi­lity.

Mr Guterres is from a humble family and like many members of East Timor’s political class took part in the bloody struggle against Indonesian occupation. He was Fretilin’s unsuccessf­ul candidate for presidenti­al polls in 2007.

Vasco Pires de Jesus, a 58-year-old labourer, said he was voting for him because “he is a fighter who fought alongside Xanana Gusmao in the forest to bring independen­ce to this country”.

Whoever wins the vote will preside over a nation with huge challenges. East Timor remains a deeply poor country and the government has struggled to improve the livelihood­s of its 1.1 million people.

As well as diversifyi­ng the resource-rich economy away from a reliance on oil, the country’s leaders must agree a new sea border with Australia after tearing up a contentiou­s maritime treaty that cuts through energy fields.

Polls closed at 3pm and preliminar­y results should be known within a few days. Many of the candidates are not serious contenders and are more concerned with raising the profile of their parties before the more important parliament­ary elections that will decide the government and prime minister. Well-known figures closely associated with the independen­ce struggle have in the past held the presidency, including Mr Gusmao and Nobel Peace laureate Jose Ramos-Horta. But many have now withdrawn from the front line of politics to let a new generation take over.

Indonesia moved into East Timor in 1975 after colonial master Portugal withdrew. During the occupation, around 183,000 people died from fighting, starvation or disease.

 ??  ?? East Timorese queue at a polling station to vote in the presidenti­al election in Dili yesterday. A former guerrilla fighter is tipped for victory after winning the backing of the two biggest parties in a new sign of stability for Asia’s youngest nation.
East Timorese queue at a polling station to vote in the presidenti­al election in Dili yesterday. A former guerrilla fighter is tipped for victory after winning the backing of the two biggest parties in a new sign of stability for Asia’s youngest nation.

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