Thursday, November 7, 2013

Tajik President Rakhmon re-elected

Tajik President Rakhmon re-elected

Giant billboards depicting President Imomali Rakhmon in Dushanbe. Photo: 3 November 2013Opponents accuse President Imomali Rakhmon of developing a personality cult
Tajikistan's President Imomali Rakhmon has won another seven-year term in office, electoral officials say.
They say he secured 83.6% of the vote in Wednesday's elections. Turnout was nearly 87%.
The president faced five challengers but the only genuine opposition candidate was barred from standing. Rakhmon, 61, did not campaign actively.
The authoritarian leader has been in office for more than 20 years in the impoverished former Soviet republic.
The EU and the US have not recognised a single election in the Central Asian country as free and fair.
Instead of campaigning, the president relied on extensive media coverage of his visits around the country, which his opponents say was heavily biased in his favour.
The opposition accuses Mr Rakhmon - whose huge billboards are seen everywhere in the capital Dushanbe and other towns - of developing a personality cult. He denies the claim.
mapThe five other presidential candidates have refrained from publicly criticising Mr Rakhmon.
Human rights activists Oynihol Bobonazarova - widely seen as the only genuine opposition candidate - was banned from the polls.
The electoral commission said earlier she had failed to collect the necessary 210,000 signatures of eligible voters to be officially registered.
Despite the easy victory, critics say Mr Rakhmon will face rising social tension in the country where some 50% of the population live in poverty.
Almost half of the nation's GDP is earned by more than one million Tajik migrants working abroad, especially in Russia,
Analysts say Tajikistan could also face further security challenges from Islamist groups in neighbouring Afghanistan after the planned pullout of the US-led forces next year.
Tajikistan was devastated by the 1992-97 civil war between the Moscow-backed government and the Islamist-led opposition.
Up to 50,000 were killed before the conflict ended with a UN-brokered peace agreement.

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