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Kyrgyz leader calls snap election | Kyrgyz leader calls snap election |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev has dissolved parliament and called fresh elections, after voters approved plans to overhaul the country's constitution. | |
In Sunday's referendum, about 75% of voters backed the constitutional changes, election officials said. | |
President Bakiyev said the new system would give the people more power, but opposition parties say the changes will hand yet more power to Mr Bakiyev. | |
The election is expected to take place later this year, probably in December. | |
Reuters reported some election observers as saying there had been incidents of ballot-stuffing during Sunday's referendum, and the official turnout of 80% of the country's 2.7m voters was inflated. | |
But the Central Election Commission denied any major irregularities. | But the Central Election Commission denied any major irregularities. |
Political stand-off | |
President Bakiyev swept to power in 2005, ousting long-term leader Askar Akayev and winning a landslide victory in presidential elections. | |
But since then, the Central Asian country has been hampered by a political stand-off between the president and parliamentary deputies elected during the Akayev era. | |
The new constitution includes a proportional representation system of voting, where candidates are selected from central party lists rather than locally elected. | |
The president has formed his own party, Ak Zhol, and analysts say the constitutional changes will help him gain a foothold in the chamber. | |
Other changes to the constitution include giving parliament more power in forming the government, and limiting the president's ability to dismiss parliament. It will also increase the number of deputies. | |
While President Bakiyev says the changes will help to clarify the separation of power, his critics say they are a move towards authoritarianism. | |
The former Soviet republic is strategically crucial for the US, whose only remaining military base in Central Asia lies just outside the capital Bishkek. |
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