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Incumbent Cyprus president to face leftist-backed rival in runoff

Elections officials open a ballot box to tally the votes for the presidential election at a voting station on January 28, 2018, in Tseri, a south suburb of the capital, Nicosia. (Photo by AFP)

The incumbent president of Cyprus has finished first in the presidential election, but failed to secure an outright majority to avoid a runoff, with observers predicting a tight race between the conservative candidate and his communist-backed rival.

According to the official results of Sunday’s vote, President Nicos Anastasiades garnered 35.5 percent of the votes, while left-leaning independent candidate Stavros Malas bagged 30.25, meaning the two will go head-to-head in a runoff on February 4.

The two men had faced each other in the second round of the 2013 presidential election, in which Anastasiades went on to win by one of the widest margins in Cypriot election history.

Both candidates have said they would reach out to Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci to examine the prospects for the resumption of negotiations on the unification of the divided Greek and Turkish sections of the Mediterranean island.

Speaking after the polls closed, Anastasiades expressed his readiness to invite other parties to form a coalition government and repeated a pledge not to seek a third term if he won a second one. The nation’s presidency does not carry terms limits.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades (C) addresses the media after casting his vote in the 2018 Cypriot presidential election at a polling station in Limassol on January 28, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

Malas, who ran as an independent with the support of the communist-rooted AKEL party, told jubilant supporters that his campaign was based on straight talk. He criticizes the current administration for not doing enough to reunite the country.

“A large social majority has expressed its desire for real, creative and hopeful change for our country,” he said.

Communist-backed presidential candidate Stavros Malas (C) speaks to the press and supporters in Nicosia on January 28, 2018 after finishing second in the first round of the presidential election. (Photo by AFP)

Last July, two years of UN-brokered talks between Anastasiades and the Turkish Cypriot leader aimed at ending the island’s nearly 44-year division collapsed as they failed to narrow their differences over key issues, including the future of tens of thousands of Turkish troops in the north.

Anastasiades, however, insists he wants talks with Akinci to restart soon.

The Cypriot election also saw Nicholas Papadopoulos, leader of the center-right DIKO party and the son of late president Tassos Papadopoulos, trail in third place with nearly 25.74 percent.

About 28 percent of eligible voters did not cast ballots on Sunday, a significant percentage given Cyprus’ traditionally high voter turnout rates.

The large number of vote absentees confirmed pre-election concerns about voter apathy among many Cypriots who are struggling with the consequences of a 2013 economic collapse of the island.


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