President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan secured a fifth consecutive term in elections on Wednesday, winning 92% of the vote.
“The Azerbaijani people have elected Ilham Aliyev as the country’s president,” Central Election Commission chief Mazahir Panahov told a press conference.
Turnout in the snap election, which was called a year early following Azerbaijan’s recapture of the Nagorno-Karabakh region from Armenian separatists last September, was 67.7%, DW reports.
Several thousand Aliyev supporters united on Wednesday evening in the streets of central Baku to celebrate his re-election, singing patriotic songs and holding signs with messages such as “Karabakh’s liberator” and “We are proud of you!”
“Although he fell short of the 93.9% predicted by initial exit polls, the margin of victory was still high, even by Aliyev’s standards. In previous elections, he generally only won about 85% of the votes.
“However, the election was held amid a crackdown on independent media and in the absence of any real opposition,” DW notes.
Azerbaijan’s main opposition parties boycotted the vote, which Ali Kerimli of the Popular Front party called an “imitation of democracy.”
“There are no conditions in the country for the conduct of free and fair elections,” he said.
The six other candidates who ran were little-known and had praised Aliyev as a great statesman and commander-in-chief since he announced the election in December, a year ahead of schedule.
Aliyev said he called the election to “mark the beginning of a new era” that sees Azerbaijan having full control over its territory.
For the first time in Azerbaijan’s post-Soviet history, 26 polling stations opened in Karabakh, where the president and first lady Mehriban Aliyeva went to cast their ballots in the region’s main city of Khankendi.
The enclave has been largely deserted after its entire ethnic-Armenian population — more than 100,000 people — fled to Armenia after Baku’s takeover.
In 2009, Aliyev amended Azerbaijan’s constitution to allow him to run for an unlimited number of presidential terms. Rights advocates criticized that move, saying it would see him become president for life.
Then, in 2016, Azerbaijan adopted controversial constitutional changes that lengthened the president’s term in office from five years to seven. Aliyev has further shored up his dynastic grip on power by appointing his wife Mehriban Aliyeva as first vice president.
Source: DW