Uzbekistan’s leader scores landslide re-election win
BY Agencies1 April 2015 4:14 AM IST
Agencies1 April 2015 4:14 AM IST
The Central Election Commission said in a statement published on its website that Karimov had garnered a 90.4 percent of the vote as nearly 91 percent of the vote were counted by late afternoon.
Even before all of the ballots were counted, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s office sent congratulations to the 77-year-old Karimov, who has led the former Soviet republic since 1990 and ruthlessly quashed all opposition to his rule.
Uzbekistan relies heavily on Russia, where 3 million Uzbeks live and work escaping unemployment and extreme poverty of their home country.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe in a statement issued today criticised the vote as a foregone conclusion for lacking “genuine political alternatives.”
The OSCE also noted that Karimov was allowed to run despite the constitutional limit of two consecutive presidential terms.
While Uzbekistan is untroubled by any immediate signs of unrest, the future of the country of 30 million people is colored with uncertainty because of a troubled security situation in neighboring Afghanistan and the lack of a clear succession plan.
Even before all of the ballots were counted, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s office sent congratulations to the 77-year-old Karimov, who has led the former Soviet republic since 1990 and ruthlessly quashed all opposition to his rule.
Uzbekistan relies heavily on Russia, where 3 million Uzbeks live and work escaping unemployment and extreme poverty of their home country.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe in a statement issued today criticised the vote as a foregone conclusion for lacking “genuine political alternatives.”
The OSCE also noted that Karimov was allowed to run despite the constitutional limit of two consecutive presidential terms.
While Uzbekistan is untroubled by any immediate signs of unrest, the future of the country of 30 million people is colored with uncertainty because of a troubled security situation in neighboring Afghanistan and the lack of a clear succession plan.
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