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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Ex-guerrilla wins E Timor presidential election

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Dili: A former guerrilla fighter has won East Timor’s presidential election in just one round, an early count indicated on Tuesday, in a sign of growing stability for Asia’s youngest nation.


With most ballots counted, Francisco Guterres — known by his nom de guerre “Lu Olo” — had received over 57 per cent of votes cast in Monday’s poll, according to the election commission.


That is comfortably above the 50 per cent needed to avoid a run-off.


Guterres’s closest rival, Education Minister Antonio de Conceicao, was on 33 per cent in a crowded field of eight candidates, election commission chief Alcino Baris said.


If final results confirm Guterres’s victory, he will take over the largely ceremonial role at a challenging time for the tiny half-island nation 15 years after it gained independence following Indonesia’s brutal occupation.


Key oil reserves are running dry and the government is struggling to resolve a long-running row with Australia over lucrative energy fields.


It will be the first time since 2002 that a presidential election in the country has been decided in just one round, if the final results due in several days confirm Guterres has won.


He was backed by the country’s second-biggest party Fretilin, which he leads, as well as by independence hero Xanana Gusmao and his CNRT party, the largest.


“A strong vote in favour of a candidate is positive,” Damien Kingsbury, an East Timor expert from Australia’s Deakin University who was in the country as an election observer, said.


The vote — the first presidential election since the departure of United Nations peacekeepers in 2012 — ran smoothly and there were reports of only low-level and sporadic unrest in the run-up.


While the presidency is largely ceremonial, it can have a key role in keeping the peace between feuding politicians. The vote sets the stage for more important parliamentary elections later in the year that will decide the government and the prime minister. — AFP


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