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  •      Election 2005   

Kazhegeldin

 

Kazakh president gains third term as observers attack ballot methods

December 6, 2005 Tuesday

ALMATY. Nursultan Nazarbayev secured a third term as president of Kazakhstan with 91 per cent of the vote, in the latest election in a former Soviet state to be criticised by observers as falling short of international standards.

The result gave a further indication that the wave of pro-democracy revolutions that swept through Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan might be fizzling out, after last month's disputed parliamentary poll in Azerbaijan.

Preliminary results of Sunday's election gave Mr Nazarbayev's main opposition challenger, Zharmakhan Tuyakbai, only 6.64 per cent, and a second opposition candidate, Alikhan Baimenov, a mere 1.65 per cent.

Mr Tuyakbai denounced "unprecedented violations of the constitution and electoral laws" and suggested the vote showed that Kazakhstan was "turning from an authoritarian regime intoa totalitarian one".

His campaign team pledged a legal challenge, and said it had sought official permission to hold demonstrations once a temporary ban on protests expired on December 14.

An international observer mission led by the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) found "some improvements" over Kazakh parliamentary polls last year, where the opposition won only one of 77 seats.

But it said the election did not meet a number of international standards, citing cases of multiple voting, ballot box stuffing and tampering with results.

Those assessments contrasted sharply with Mr Nazarbayev's earlier pledges that the election wouldbe fair, and his declaration on Sunday that it wastaking place in "unprecedented democratic conditions".

Yesterday, he said Kazakhs had voted for "calmness and stability". He added that promised political reforms would be his third-termpriority.

The 90 per cent-plus vote puts the Kazakh leader in the same bracket numerically at least as his autocratic central Asian neighbours Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan and Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan.

One European diplomat in Almaty, Kazakhstan's biggest city, warned that the result and the observers' verdict could complicate Mr Nazarbayev's ambitions to chair the OSCE in 2009.

Mr Nazarbayev's "soft authoritarian" methods, however, along with fast-growing output from the country's vast oil and gas reserves, have delivered higher living standards and made Kazakhstan the most advanced central Asian state.

Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, was the first foreign leader to congratulate Mr Nazarbayev in a phone call yesterday.

Russia's observer mission was one of several to declare the elections democratic.

By NEIL BUCKLEY

Financial Times (London, England)

http://www.eurasia.org.ru
08 Dec 2005

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