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COLOMBO, Nov. 17 (Xinhuanet) -- Sri Lankan
presidential election started Thursday morning as 13.3 million men and women
began to cast their ballots to choose their new president from 13 contenders.
A grand of 13,327,160 people aged over 18 are eligible to vote on Thursday during a nine-hour polling period
from 7:00 a.m. (0100GMT) to 4:00 p.m. (1000 GMT).
The election is staging at 10,486 polling stations
island wide including 233 cluster polling stations set up in the government
controlled areas for the voters residing in the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
rebel controlled areas.
Among the 13 candidates, Sri Lanka's main opposition
leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and Sri Lankan Prime Minister and the ruling party's
candidate Mahinda Rajapakse are two of front runners.
"There has been no any reports of violence incidents
so far in the country's fifth president election and all polling stations are in
order," Elections Commissioner Dayananda Dissanayake said.
Counting of ballot papers will begin as soon as the
voting ends and the final result of the election will be announced early Friday,
said Dissanayake.
The government deployed 24,000 police officers and
more troops to keep order during the presidential election, and over 22,000
election observers from local and abroad were being detailed across the island
country.
An independent poll survey had shown that the issue
of cost of living and the peace process with Tamil Tigers were the two main
issues in the election.
Rajapakse has pledged a tough line on the Tamil
rebels as he forged election pacts with the leftist JVP (People's Liberation
Front) and the Sinhalese nationalist party JHU (National Heritage Party).
In his manifesto, Rajapakse said the ceasefire
agreement signedin 2002 between the government and the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was short-sighted and national security was compromised by
that pact.
Rajapakse proposed to critically examine the merits
and demerits of the steps taken so far to deal with the ethnic issue and
consider a fresh approach.
"The ceasefire agreement will be amended so as to
ensure that acts of terrorism would not be permitted in any way. The ceasefire
monitoring mechanism would also be reviewed and new steps taken," said
Rajapakse.
By contrast, the opposition United National Party
leader Wickremesinghe vowed to bring about a permanent resolution to the ethnic
problem through a political solution based on the current framework.
"The agreement arrived between the government and the
LTTE and the Oslo and Tokyo Declaration, which guarantees the unity, democratic
character and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka, has created the framework of a
solution acceptable to all communities of the country," Wickremesinghe said.
Rajapakse and Wickremesinghe also have different
opinions on economic policy. Rajapakse vowed to build up a "national economy" by
attributing the positive attributes of free market economy withdomestic
aspirations. Wickremesinghe put more emphasis on free market policies and
foreign investment.
Meanwhile, the LTTE has reiterated Wednesday that it
will advise Tamil people not to vote and denied newspaper reports that the LTTE
was now actively encouraging people to vote in the presidential election, a
pro-Tigers Website TamilNet said.
"Tamils cannot place our trust on either of the
parties or their candidates in the presidential election," Head of the LTTE's
Peace Secretariat S. Pulidevan was quoted saying.
A neck and neck campaign race and fine weather are expected to have more voters to the election booths. Enditem
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