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Kazakh leader apologizes for 97.7 percent re-election victory
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Contributor | IndyGeorgia |
Last Edited | IndyGeorgia Apr 28, 2015 02:13am |
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Category | News |
Author | Raushan Nurshayeva and Dmitry Solovyov |
Media | Website - Yahoo News |
News Date | Tuesday, April 28, 2015 08:00:00 AM UTC0:0 |
Description | ASTANA/ALMATY (Reuters) - Kazakhstan's long-serving President Nursultan Nazarbayev apologized on Monday for winning re-election with 97.7 percent of the vote, saying it would have "looked undemocratic" for him to intervene to make his victory more modest.
Sunday's election gives another five year term to the 74-year-old former steelworker, who has ruled the oil-producing nation since rising to the post of its Soviet-era Communist Party boss in 1989. Central Election Commission data showed turnout was 95.22 percent.
Television showed a triumphant Nazarbayev walking on a red carpet, smiling and shaking hands and greeting thousands of jubilant supporters at what officials called "The Victors' Forum" held in a spacious stadium in the capital Astana.
"Kazakhstan has shown its political culture to the entire world," he told his supporters.
At a later news conference, he said of the poll results: "I apologize that for super-democratic states such figures are unacceptable. But I could do nothing. If I had interfered, I would have looked undemocratic, right?" |
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