Sat. Oct 5th, 2024
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Former guerilla fighter and independence hero Xanana Gusmao is in prime position to win Timor-Leste’s parliamentary election, with more than half of the votes counted after Sunday’s poll. 

South-east Asia’s youngest nation went to the polls on Sunday, with analysts’ predictions of a tight result largely coming to fruition.  

On Monday afternoon, Mr Gusmao’s party CNRT had polled just short of 40 per cent of the vote, with counting continuing on Monday and into the week.

If there is no outright winner, Timor-Leste’s constitution gives the party with the most votes the first opportunity to form government through a coalition. On current trends, that means CNRT will need to form a coalition with one — or multiple — of the 16 other parties that contested the election.

CNRT did not sign a coalition deal prior to the election. 

The incumbent ruling government — a coalition between Mari Alkatiri’s FRETILIN party, the People’s Liberation Party and Kmanek Haburas Unidade Nasional Timor Oan (KHNUTO) — had pledged to join forces again.

FRETILIN currently holds about 27 per cent of the vote and KHNUTO has just over 7 per cent. 

Fretilin party leader Mari Alkatiri is vying for another shot at the top job. ()

The 76-year-old Mr Gusmao ran on a platform of economic advancement, pledging to develop the Greater Sunrise oil and gas fields, 450 kilometres north-west of Darwin.

Mr Gusmao successfully negotiated a maritime border with Australia in 2018, securing between 70 and 80 per cent of petroleum royalties for his country.

The deal was struck following allegations the Howard government spied on its young neighbour to gain an upper hand in earlier deals.

Xanana Gusmao is in prime spot to take the election.()

After voting on Sunday, FRETILIN candidate and Timorese resistance leader Dr Alkatiri told ABC he would seek to renegotiate the treaty Mr Gusmao signed with Australia, if elected.

“This so-called maritime boundary with Australia, we need to change something, better for Timor-Leste,” he said on Sunday. 

“Why 30 per cent for Australia if the pipeline comes to Timor-Leste? If it is 100 per cent in our boundaries, it doesn’t make sense.”

Dr Alkatiri said he’d already flagged his intentions with Steve Bracks, former Victorian premier and the Australian government’s special representative for Greater Sunrise negotiations.

Mr Bracks was awarded an Order of Timor-Leste – the country’s highest honour – at a ceremony on Friday, ahead of the election. 

“Australia will be open to the idea,” Dr Alkatiri said.

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