搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
Voters in Guinea-Bissau are choosing a new leader. Sunday's election is meant to replace President Joao Bernardo Vieira, who was killed by mutinous1 troops five months ago.
Malam Bacai Sanha waits to speak during a rally, in the capital Bissau (File)
Voters in Guinea-Bissau are choosing between two men who have both led the country before.
Ruling-party candidate Malam Bacai Sanha is a former interim2 president and chair of the national assembly who won last month's first round of voting with nearly 40 percent of ballots3 cast. He is expected to gain the support of most of those who voted for an independent candidate who finished third.
Opposition4 candidate Kumba Yala beat Sanha in the presidential run-off in 2000. But he may have difficulty building on the 29 percent of the vote he won last month because his presidency5 is best remembered for financial mismanagement and the arrest of political opponents.
Though Mr. Yala is from the country's ethnic6 majority, which has long controlled the military, he was toppled in a 2003 coup7 before unilaterally declaring himself president and temporarily seizing the presidential palace in 2005.
Guinea-Bissau has a long history of army mutinies and coups8. President Vieira was killed in March within hours of his chief political rival dying in a bomb blast.
One of the opposition candidates in the first round of voting was killed by military police who said he was resisting arrest on suspicion of plotting a coup. His family says he was shot in his bed at four in the morning.
In an open letter to Mr. Sanha and Mr. Yala before Sunday's vote, the Canadian International Institute of Applied9 Negotiation10 and the International Crisis Group called on the losing candidate to "refrain from taking any form of violent actions that could further undermine the fragile stability in the country."
The groups urged the winner to be magnanimous as he will face immense challenges as the new president "that should transcend11 partisan12 politics."
Both candidates wrapped up their campaigns calling for an end to political assassinations13.
Regional diplomats14 say the challenge for the new president will be forcing Bissau's military to respect civilian15 leadership and keep out of politics.
本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎 点击提交 分享给大家。