Special Report: Presidential election begins in
Peru
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| Peru's presidential candidate Alan Garcia
answers reporters' questions after voting at a polling station in Lima on
Presidential election day, June 4, 2006. (Xinhua
photo) |
LIMA, June 4 (Xinhua) -- Peru's ex-president Alan
Garcia had a convincing lead of over 10 percent in the presidential runoff on
Sunday over Nationalist ex-army commander Ollanta Humala, according to an
official count of the ballots.
With 77.3 percent of the vote counted, Garcia won
55.46 percent of the vote while his rival Humala got 44.54, said Magdalena Chu,
the electoral agency chief, who described Garcia's lead as almost
"insurmountable."
"The people have voted for us," said Garcia,
expressing his gratitude to the Peruvians "who have given a majority of the
vote" to him.
Unofficial projections made by the Apoyo polling firm
a few hours ago indicated Garcia won 52.8 percent of the vote against 47.2
percent for Humala.
The figures were echoed by another exit poll
conducted by the Dantum International firm, which said Garcia garnered 55
percent against Humala's 45 percent of the vote, based on almost 27,500
interviews.
Sunday's vote is a run-off between the two
left-wingers, who won the most votes from a 20-strong field of first round
candidates.
Garcia, 57, won just over 24 percent in the April 9
first round vote while Humala, 43, gained just short of 31 percent.
Some 16.5 million Peruvians are eligible to vote in
these elections.
Garcia held Peru's presidency from 1985 to 1990,
during which the Latin American country was mired in guerrilla violence and
economic chaos. But he said during the election campaign that he had learned
from the mistakes of his 1985-1990 term and would better manage Peru's economy.
Humala, who described himself as a center-left
democrat, is feared by Peru's middle and upper classes. He denounced them as
corrupt and regardless of the needs of the poor, and vowed to amend the
constitution to deprive them of power.
Analysts said many Peruvians showed apparent
preference for Garcia, who was dubbed "Latin America's Kennedy" at the age of 35
when he was elected the nation's president, regarding him as the lesser of the
two evils and less hostile to business.
Garcia was educated in the Law Department of Catholic
University in Lima and the National University of San Marcos. He became a lawyer
in 1972 and then continued to study in Spain, France, Britain and the
Netherlands. He gained a doctor's degree in law and sociology.
He has pledged to scrap any free-trade deal with the
United States and raise taxes on the mining industry, the main engine of Peru's
economy. Enditem
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