成人快手

Fiji's main political rivals deadlocked after parliamentary election

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People vote at a polling station in Suva, Fiji. Photo: 14 December 2022Image source, Reuters
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The election in the Pacific island nation has been marred by fraud allegations

Fiji's two main rival political parties headed by former coup leaders are deadlocked after Wednesday's general election, final results show.

The Fiji First of Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama and opposition leader Sitiveni Rabuka's People's Alliance will each get 26 parliamentary seats.

They now face a race to form a ruling coalition with the Social Democratic Liberal Party, which has three seats.

The poll in the Pacific island nation has been marred by fraud allegations.

Confidence has been further dented after an app monitoring the results crashed.

Mr Rabuka, 74, was questioned by police on Friday, following his calls for the military to intervene.

The general secretary of the Social Democratic Liberal Party, Lenaitasi Duru, says his organisation is yet to decide where it will lend its support, adding that it will be backing whoever can best help indigenous Fijians.

If the party sides with People's Alliance, it would mark the end of Mr Bainimarama's nearly 16 years in power.

Mr Bainimarama, 68, took control via a coup in 2006, becoming prime minister the following year.

Meanwhile, Mr Rabuka was the leader of Fiji's first coup in 1987 and served as prime minister in 1992-99.

Since Fiji gained independence from the UK in 1970, rivalry between the indigenous Fijian and the ethnic Indian communities has been at the root of much of the political upheaval in the country.

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