AFP
Astana

Kazakhstan’s citizens turned out in force yesterday for a presidential poll almost certain to re-elect the 74-year-old strongman incumbent Nursultan Nazarbayev, who said he was confident of public backing for his campaign.
The country’s Central Election Commission said the turnout was 89.69% by 1200 GMT with polling set to continue until 1400 GMT.
The marginalised opposition in the energy-rich former Soviet state has not put forward any candidates for the election and Nazarbayev is standing against two candidates widely seen as pro-government figures.
Nazarbayev has ruled the Central Asian country since before the breakup of the USSR in 1991.
If he wins a new five-year term, he will be on course to reach three decades as leader.
He cast his ballot to loud applause in the capital Astana, saying that he was confident Kazakhstan’s people would back his campaign.
“I am sure Kazakhstan’s people will vote primarily for the stable development of our state and the improvement of people’s lives, as well as the stability of the state and in support of the policies the country has implemented under my leadership,” Nazarbayev told journalists. “I am confident of this.”
Many citizens standing in long, snaking queues at polling stations in the capital Astana and second city Almaty cited a “civic duty” to vote.
Gulmira Bardygulova, a student in the country’s largest city, Almaty, said she had voted for Nazarbayev to save the country from political turmoil.
“Young people themselves understand their duty – nobody is forcing us to vote. We have seen revolutions in Kyrgyzstan, war in Ukraine. Nobody wants this future for Kazakhstan.”
Some, though, complained of having been pressured to turn out to vote by their employers.
In Astana, one voter, who refused to give her name but said she worked as a clerk, complained that everybody in her office had been rung up by a line manager and asked to vote.
“Of course I voted for Nazarbayev,” she said. “Who are the other two?”
One of the candidates standing against Nazarbayev, Turgun Syzdykov, is a 68-year-old former official who has campaigned on an anti-globalisation platform, railing against Hollywood, hamburgers and computer games.
He represents the Communist People’s Party of Kazakhstan.
The other, Abelgazy Kusainov, 63, has held several important governmental posts and currently heads the national federation of trade unions. He is standing as an independent with a campaign touching on Kazakhstan’s environmental problems.
“This is not an election, it is a re-election,” Dosym Saptaev, director of the Kazakhstan Risks Assessment Group, a think tank based in the largest city Almaty, told AFP. “The significance of the event is no more than the fact that it may well be Nazarbayev’s last.”
An Ipsos MORI poll released on Tuesday showed 91% of Kazakhstan’s citizens are satisfied with Nazarbayev’s rule.
Economic issues have come to the forefront in recent months in Kazakhstan, the most prosperous of the five ex-Soviet Central Asian states.
Kazakhstan’s domestic producers have been laying off workers as they struggle to compete with Russian imports made cheaper by the dramatic weakening of the sanctions-hit rouble.
Kazakhstan banned a number of Russian foodstuffs in March and April, citing standards violations, and also restricted imports of Russian fuel.
Moscow, traditionally viewed as a strong ally of the republic, implemented tit-for-tat measures.
Depressed prices for Kazakhstan’s main export, crude oil, have created a headache for the government, with ratings agency Standard and Poor’s downgrading the country’s sovereign credit rating from BBB+ to BBB – close to junk territory – earlier this year.
The vast, steppe-dominated country bordering both Russia and China has never held an election deemed free and fair by international monitors.
Nazarbayev claimed victory in the last presidential election in 2011, with 95.5% of the vote.
Yesterday’s ballot – called a year ahead of schedule – is the fifth he has contested.
In its interim report on the vote, the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) raised concerns about Nazarbayev’s “institutional advantage”.
While Nazarbayev’s posters and billboards were “visible throughout the country”, the other two candidates have distributed “almost no campaign materials”, the OSCE said.
The OSCE sent almost 300 observers to the vote.


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