Voters in Uzbekistan are casting their ballots in a presidential election in which incumbent President Shavkat Mirziyoyev faces no genuine opposition and is almost certain to win a second term.
Voting across the Central Asian country of 34 million people began at 8 am local time (03:00 GMT) on Sunday and will last until 8 pm (15:00 GMT).
In his bid to secure a second five-year term, Mirziyoyev faces four contenders who are loyal to his government and who were plucked from parties in the rubber-stamp parliament.
A would-be independent challenger, academic Khidirnazar Allakulov, fell at the first hurdle after failing to register a party that could nominate him.
Human Rights Watch said this month that officials “harassed (Allakulov’s) party supporters and interfered in their efforts to collect signatures for registration”.
Mirziyoyev’s predicted victory will allow him to deepen his largely successful reform campaign and likely lead to Uzbekistan opening up further to foreign trade and investment – while retaining a highly centralized political system.
He came to power in 2016 after the death of his mentor, Islam Karimov, who was Uzbekistan’s first post-independence president and had ruled the country for 27 years.
The new leader has been credited for launching what he calls a “New Uzbekistan”, ending a decades-old system of forced labor in cotton fields, where thousands of schoolchildren once toiled alongside their teachers.
He reined in the powerful security services, introduced limited media freedoms, and oversaw a release of a number of political prisoners who had ended up behind bars due to Karimov’s zero-tolerance approach towards dissent.
He also presided over an unprecedented boom in foreign tourism and rebuilt the country’s ties with both Russia and the West.
SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES