The Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party (MPRP) said yesterday it had won a majority of seats in the nation’s parliament and was poised to form a new government.
Reports said it was the front-runner in early returns yesterday from the parliamentary election.
According to early estimates, the ruling MPRP had garnered 40 to 50 of the 76 seats in the State Great Khural, or parliament, after being in a dead heat with the opposition Democratic Party going into Sunday’s elections.
Mongolia’s election commission said about 74 percent of 1.5 million registered voters cast their ballots on Sunday.
Mongolians eagerly awaited the results, which had seen the country’s two main parties in a dead heat and hoping to avoid a deadlock that could stall efforts to tap the vast country’s mining wealth.
While the MPRP appeared to have a slight edge in early returns from rural areas, the Democratic Party was also confident, with votes in the capital, its traditional stronghold, still being counted.
“It’s quite clear by remarks from both parties that the MPRP is winning in the countryside, but it’s not clear by how much,” said Luvsandendev Sumati, director of the Sant Maral Foundation, a group that does polling and surveys. “Ulan Bator is still vague because there is very tough competition. It’s very difficult to predict who is winning.”
The MPRP ruled Mongolia as a Soviet satellite for much of the last century but has since embraced market reforms and its leader, Sanjaagiin Bayar, is the country’s third prime minister in the last four years.
Local television showed a Democratic Party spokesman predicting victory in some rural districts, but said “in several constituencies the race is very tight”.
Both parties say they support the ratification of a draft investment agreement that would give the go ahead to Ivanhoe Mines and Rio Tinto to develop the massive Oyu Tolgoi copper and gold project.
It could also open the door to other deals for coal and uranium that lie beneath the vast steppes and deserts of the country.
But several smaller parties are more cautious on mining deals that they fear could give away wealth to foreigners, and those groups could be in a key position if there is no clear majority in parliament.
International observers said the vote in Mongolia, which has been praised as a model of democracy in Central Asia, was free and fair.
“From our observations, the process appears to have been fair and transparent,” said Bill Infante, the Asia Foundation’s country representative in Mongolia.
Mongolia’s Election Commission said a final result would not be likely late yesterday at the earliest, but if there were disputes in some districts it could be much later.
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