Mongolia is to hold its first ever presidential runoff vote on July 9, after none of the three candidates secured an absolute majority in an election marred by a “sabotage” attempt, electoral authorities said yesterday.
The result of Monday’s vote was put off by several hours, angering supporters of the losing candidate who protested the delay as suspicious.
The drama capped a campaign marked by corruption scandals plaguing all three candidates that overshadowed voter concerns over unemployment in the debt-laden country wedged between Russia and China.
Former judoka Battulga Khaltmaa of the opposition Democratic Party finished first with 38 percent of the vote, the General Election Committee said, well short of the 51 percent majority needed to win outright.
Mongolian parliament speaker Miyegombyn Enkhbold of the Mongolian People’s Party (MPP) finished second with just over 30 percent of the vote.
Enkhbold edged Sainkhuu Ganbaatar of the Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party (MPRP) by just 0.1 percentage point after he had trailed in the early vote count.
Members of the MPRP yesterday held a protest at the General Election Committee office, Mongolian General Election Commission Chairman Choizon Sodnomtseren said.
Sodnomtseren defended the delay in announcing the result, saying someone had broken a broadband cable in Govi-Altai Province, preventing the results from several polling stations being counted until yesterday morning.
He said it was an act of “deliberate sabotage.”
The delay angered Ganbaatar’s MPRP, which sought to break the domination of the main parties.
“The General Election Committee intentionally delayed the reports from the polling stations,” MPRP senior official Erdenebileg Erdenejamiyan told reporters hours before the results were announced. “We believe they are changing the results.”
On Monday, Mongolians voted in the capital, the country’s sprawling steppes and even in yurts serving as polling stations.
“I didn’t like the campaigns, I felt like I had no one to vote for,” Batbayar Nyamjargal, 24, said after voting at a polling station next to a playground in Ulan batar. “I thought about the decision for a long time and I’m still not 100 percent sure I made the right choice. All three of them had issues.”
The resource-rich nation of just 3 million people has struggled in recent years with mounting debt.
The next president will inherit a US$5.5 billion bailout led by the IMF and designed to stabilize its economy and lessen dependence on China, which purchases 80 percent of Mongolian exports.
However, voters heard little from the three candidates about unemployment and jobs, their top concerns according to opinion polls.
Campaigning has instead focused on their opponents’ allegedly shady pasts.
A video showed Enkhbold and two MPP officials discussing a 60 billion togrog (US$26 million) plan for selling government positions.
Battulga, a brash businessman, was haunted by reports of offshore accounts attached to his name, as well as the arrests of several of his associates by Mongolia’s anti-corruption body last spring.
REBUILDING: A researcher said that it might seem counterintuitive to start talking about reconstruction amid the war with Russia, but it is ‘actually an urgent priority’ Italy is hosting the fourth annual conference on rebuilding Ukraine even as Russia escalates its war, inviting political and business leaders to Rome to promote public-private partnerships on defense, mining, energy and other projects as uncertainty grows about the US’ commitment to Kyiv’s defense. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy were opening the meeting yesterday, which gets under way as Russia accelerated its aerial and ground attacks against Ukraine with another night of pounding missile and drone attacks on Kyiv. Italian organizers said that 100 official delegations were attending, as were 40 international organizations and development banks. There are
TARIFF ACTION: The US embassy said that the ‘political persecution’ against former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro disrespects the democratic traditions of the nation The US and Brazil on Wednesday escalated their row over US President Donald Trump’s support for former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro, with Washington slapping a 50 percent tariff on one of its main steel suppliers. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva threatened to reciprocate. Trump has criticized the prosecution of Bolsonaro, who is on trial for allegedly plotting to cling on to power after losing 2022 elections to Lula. Brasilia on Wednesday summoned Washington’s top envoy to the country to explain an embassy statement describing Bolsonaro as a victim of “political persecution” — echoing Trump’s description of the treatment of Bolsonaro as
Pakistani police yesterday said a father shot dead his daughter after she refused to delete her TikTok account. In the Muslim-majority country, women can be subjected to violence by family members for not following strict rules on how to behave in public, including in online spaces. “The girl’s father had asked her to delete her TikTok account. On refusal, he killed her,” a police spokesperson said. Investigators said the father killed his 16-year-old daughter on Tuesday “for honor,” the police report said. The man was subsequently arrested. The girl’s family initially tried to “portray the murder as a suicide” said police in
The military is to begin conscripting civilians next year, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said yesterday, citing rising tensions with Thailand as the reason for activating a long-dormant mandatory enlistment law. The Cambodian parliament in 2006 approved a law that would require all Cambodians aged 18 to 30 to serve in the military for 18 months, although it has never been enforced. Relations with Thailand have been tense since May, when a long-standing territorial dispute boiled over into cross-border clashes, killing one Cambodian soldier. “This episode of confrontation is a lesson for us and is an opportunity for us to review, assess and