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Conservative in Salvadoran vote demands fresh polls

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The conservative candidate in El Salvador's tight presidential runoff, in which no winner has been declared, demanded a new vote be held.

Preliminary results show Salvador Sanchez Ceren, a former rebel commander, edging out conservative Norman Quijano by just 6,634 votes, 50.11 percent to 49.89.

A final manual tally was under way with the electoral council expected to announce a winner Friday.

The preliminary result was a surprise because the leftist Sanchez Ceren had been favored to win by as many as 10 percentage points.

Quijano, the San Salvador mayor, said he wanted a new election because the electoral council refused to do a vote-by-vote recount across the whole country.

The electoral council maintains that Salvadoran law has no provision for such a full, back to the beginning recount.

"We are getting out front and submitting a request for the March 9 runoff vote to be declared null and void," said Quijano.

After his announcement, members of his ARENA coalition walked out of the manual vote tally they were monitoring.

That halted the tally temporarily. But the Supreme Electoral Tribunal later resumed it, saying the ARENA complaints were not enough to stop it.

Legislative speaker Sigfrido Reyes, a leftist with the FMLN, said: "The final tally is one element of our legal process here. Nobody, not on some person or party's whim, can just call it off."

The FMLN and ARENA were the main protagonists of a bloody 1979-1992 civil war, and the election results showed how divided the country remains more than two decades later.

The conservative candidate in El Salvador’s tight presidential runoff, in which no winner has been declared, demanded a new vote be held.

Preliminary results show Salvador Sanchez Ceren, a former rebel commander, edging out conservative Norman Quijano by just 6,634 votes, 50.11 percent to 49.89.

A final manual tally was under way with the electoral council expected to announce a winner Friday.

The preliminary result was a surprise because the leftist Sanchez Ceren had been favored to win by as many as 10 percentage points.

Quijano, the San Salvador mayor, said he wanted a new election because the electoral council refused to do a vote-by-vote recount across the whole country.

The electoral council maintains that Salvadoran law has no provision for such a full, back to the beginning recount.

“We are getting out front and submitting a request for the March 9 runoff vote to be declared null and void,” said Quijano.

After his announcement, members of his ARENA coalition walked out of the manual vote tally they were monitoring.

That halted the tally temporarily. But the Supreme Electoral Tribunal later resumed it, saying the ARENA complaints were not enough to stop it.

Legislative speaker Sigfrido Reyes, a leftist with the FMLN, said: “The final tally is one element of our legal process here. Nobody, not on some person or party’s whim, can just call it off.”

The FMLN and ARENA were the main protagonists of a bloody 1979-1992 civil war, and the election results showed how divided the country remains more than two decades later.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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