Nazarbayev wins by an overwhelming majority
by admin on Apr.06, 2011, under game
Nazarbayev wins by an overwhelming majority. After a partial count Monday was Nazarbayev got 95.5 percent of the vote, a clear improvement compared to the 91.2 percent he received in the last re-election in 2005. Until The meeting was at the 89.9 per cent.
One of Nazarbayev advisers predicted before the election that he would get an even better result than last time because he was in the past, darkfall online gold, year has been formally awarded the title of "the nation's leader."
The other three candidates, all of whom are supporters of the government, were all under 3 percent. Environmental candidate Melsa Jeleusizov admitted that he had even voted for Nazarbayev.
- I expressed my respect for the victor, "he told reporters.
Rejects criticism
Nazarbayev himself rejected all criticisms that had come to the election,, wow cheap power leveling, when he took the vote in the capital Sunday.
- We have an open and democratic society, said the president.
- All presidential candidates have had the same opportunity to visit the regions. They have had the same access to the media. They have expressed their ideas and thoughts towards the Kazakh people, "he said in the National Library, cheap wow powerleveling, in Astana.
Nazarbayev has ruled the oil-rich former Soviet republic in Central Asia since before independence. Since re-election, he may be sitting in another five years.
At home he is reasonably popular because living standards are far higher than in neighboring countries. People also appreciate that law and order is maintained.
Authoritarian rule
But rights groups condemned the country's authoritarian political system, which, darkfall online gold, they say has changed little from the Soviet era.
The election was marred and marked by the one of the nation's leading critics, Danijar Moldasjjov, the publisher of the newspaper of the Republic vote, disappeared after he was assaulted and abducted outside his home.
The international committee to protect journalists are seriously worried, but one of the president's advisers say it's all staged to shed bad light on the election.