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Uzbeks vote in parliamentary poll

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Al-Jazeera

Uzbeks have gone to the polls in an election set to hand all the seats in the lower house of parliament to allies of Islam Karimov, the country's president.

Uzbekistan has no opposition parties or independent candidates and has never held a vote considered free and fair by Western-based international observers.

Turnout for the state-managed election on Sunday was likely to high despite widespread apathy, with voting compulsory in many neighbourhoods and companies.

Candidates from four official parties are contesting the 150 seats in the Oliy Majlis and have publicly criticised each other, mostly over social policy, while praising Karimov's achievements.

A fifth party, the Ecological Movement of Uzbekistan, which is focused solely on environmental issues, automatically gets 15 seats in the chamber.

"The election is taking part in an increasingly active and healthy environment of social and political competition among parties," Mirza-Ulugbek Abdusalomov, the central election commission chief, told reporters ahead of the vote.

'Meaningless' election

However, some voters did not appear convinced.

"There is no point," the Reuters news agency quoted one man in the capital Tashkent as saying before voting opened at 0100 GMT. "It is meaningless."

Another man was quoted as saying: "People here seriously do not care. ... It's not an election."

The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe decided not to send a full mission to the former Soviet state after criticising Tashkent for failing to implement any of its recommendations.

Uzbekistan's relations with the US and European Union soured after soldiers opened fire on protesters in the town of Andizhan in 2005, but have since improved.

This year, Uzbekistan allowed transit of supplies for US troops in Afghanistan through its territory and released an opposition politician from jail after the EU dropped sanctions against the country.

Uzbekistan has large gas and oil reserves and is among the world's top 10 gold producers.

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Dr Q A said:

AA... The case of Uzbekistan is more proof of how evil and corrupt the nations of the west are... If this is nt blatant hypocrisy then what is? All talk of human rights and happily doing business with Karimov the Butcher of innocent Humans... You know I am sick and tired of all this... when will all of this end?
 
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December 28, 2009
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Abdul-Kareem said:

The President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov gained 91.9% of the vote in the 2000 elections. The sole opposition candidate Abdulhasiz Jalalov admitted he only entered the race to make it seem democratic and that he voted for Karimov!
 
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December 27, 2009
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