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Monday 23 April 2018 - 06:18

Conservative Benitez wins Paraguay presidency

Story Code : 719881
Paraguay
Paraguay's presidential candidate of the Colorado Party, Mario Abdo Benitez (C), next to his wife Silvana Lopez Moreira, cheer at the crowd at Partido Colorado headquarters in Asuncion on April 22, 2018. (Photo by AFP)
The US-educated son of a senior aide to the country’s late dictator, Abdo Benitez, won slightly more than 46 percent of the vote, with his centrist opponent Efrain Alegre taking almost 43 percent in a race that was far closer than expected.
 
Opinion polls had consistently given Abdo Benitez, 46, a clear lead of up to 20 points over Alegre in a two-man contest to succeed outgoing conservative President Horacio Cartes.
 
Despite a slow start, turnout stood at 65 percent by the time polling stations closed at 4:00 p.m. (2000 GMT). As the counting got under way, it quickly became clear the race would be much closer than expected.
 
Analysts said electing Abdo Benitez, the son of the personal secretary to dictator Alfredo Stroessner, suggested that Paraguayans had managed to turn the page on the darkest chapter of their recent history.
 
Landlocked Paraguay -- sandwiched between Argentina, Bolivia and Brazil -- has enjoyed consistent economic growth under tobacco magnate Cartes, but has failed to shake off persistent poverty, corruption and drug trafficking.
 
It remains a land of contrasts, still marked by the 1954-1989 dictatorship of General Stroessner.
 
However, a new generation of voters among the electorate of 4.2 million -- born after the dictatorship responsible for the deaths or disappearances of up to 3,000 people -- seems ready to look to the future.
 
In Paraguay, 43 percent of the population is aged between 18 and 34.
 
Ahead of the vote, Abdo Benitez appeared confident his background would not affect his chances.
 
“I have earned my democratic credentials on my political journey,” he said.
 
But Alegre had banked on people voting for change after almost 70 years of dominance by the ruling Colorado party.
 
Voters also cast their ballots for a new parliament and governors of the country’s 17 departments.
 
Abdo Benitez, who goes by the nickname “Marito,” has pledged to reform the judicial system to render it less prone to corruption, but to maintain Cartes’ economic policy.
 
Alegre, the outsider at the head of the centrist GANAR alliance, had offered free health care for the poor and to slash the cost of electricity to stimulate investment and jobs.
 
But the odds are stacked in Abdo Benitez’s favor: The only time the country had a president who did not come from the Colorado party was in 2008-2012, when former Catholic bishop Fernando Lugo ruled.
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