ULAN BATOR: Mongolians voted yesterday in a presidential election pitting the front-running incumbent against a champion wrestler and a woman, amid calls for a fairer distribution of the former Soviet satellite’s spectacular mining wealth.
The exploitation of Mongolia’s vast coal, copper and gold reserves has helped transform an economy once characterised by nomadic lifestyles not far removed from its famous empire-building hero, Genghis Khan, 800 years ago.
But rising inequality in the cities and environmental damage in rural areas are dominating the political debate, while recent falls in commodity prices and slowing demand in the key market of China have sparked uncertainty ahead of the election.
“I call upon citizens to participate actively in the election,” President Tsakhia Elbegdorj said after casting his vote.
“Let the blessings be upon the people,” added the incumbent, a former journalist who played a leading role when Mongolia peacefully threw off 70 years of communist rule in 1990.
Voters appeared to be out in force in the hours after polls opened at 7am, with national television showing huge queues in some polling stations.
Turnout was 57.7 percent at 7pm — three hours before the scheduled close of polls — amid heavy rains in some regions that hindered road travel, according to the General Election Commission (GEC). Final turnout for the 2009 presidential election came to 73 percent.
At one site in the capital Ulan Bator, electronic voting machines were experiencing glitches, which meant voters could not be identified by their fingerprints.
Accusations of vote-rigging in 2008 parliamentary elections resulted in deadly riots, and led to Mongolia adopting an electronic voting system. But GEC chief Sodnomtseren Choinzon said the computer problems were confined to two voting stations and were “not widespread”.
Results of parliamentary polls last year were delayed by complaints about the electronic system. However, the election was largely considered a success.
Polls suggest Elbegdorj, who became president in 2009 after twice serving as premier, will secure a second term to continue his policy of using foreign cash to drive the rapid development of Mongolia’s economy, which is galloping ahead at double-digit rates.
A June 14-16 survey by the Sant Maral Foundation in the capital, a traditional stronghold of the ruling Democratic Party, suggested that 54 percent of Mongolians would vote for Elbegdorj.
AFP