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Czech election: Ballots cast in presidential poll | Czech election: Ballots cast in presidential poll |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Votes are being counted in the Czech Republic's presidential election, the first time the role has been decided by direct popular vote. | |
Former Czech Prime Minister Milos Zeman was leading Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg in the second round, with 30% of votes counted. | |
Before polls closed at 13:00 GMT, people braved freezing conditions to vote in the nail-bitingly close poll. | |
Mr Zeman was ahead by 59% to 41%, with a third of votes counted. | |
The former prime minister gained 24.2% in the first round, with Mr Schwarzenberg winning 23.4%. | |
"It'll be very tight," Mr Schwarzenberg said after casting his ballot in the small village of Sykorice, south-west of Prague. | "It'll be very tight," Mr Schwarzenberg said after casting his ballot in the small village of Sykorice, south-west of Prague. |
"I'm not nervous, far from it, I'm calm, we'll see," he added. | "I'm not nervous, far from it, I'm calm, we'll see," he added. |
Mr Zeman said he had said all he wanted to say. | Mr Zeman said he had said all he wanted to say. |
"Now it's the turn of citizens," he added. | "Now it's the turn of citizens," he added. |
Different candidates | Different candidates |
The BBC's Rob Cameron in Prague says that though Czechs are generally disillusioned with politics, they have been turning out in droves to chose the two very different candidates - Mr Zeman, the acerbic former Social Democrat prime minister, and Karel Schwarzenberg, the elderly, aristocratic foreign minister. | |
Mr Zeman is a hard-drinking, chain-smoking politician, known for his witty put-downs of his political opponents while Mr Schwarzenberg is a titled prince, 75 years old but wildly popularly amongst young, urban voters, our correspondent says. | |
In the early 1990s, Mr Schwarzenberg worked as chancellor to the President Vaclav Havel, the leader of the Velvet Revolution that brought down Communist rule in 1989. | In the early 1990s, Mr Schwarzenberg worked as chancellor to the President Vaclav Havel, the leader of the Velvet Revolution that brought down Communist rule in 1989. |
The new president will represent the Czech Republic abroad and appoint candidates to the constitutional court and the central bank, but does not carry much day-to-day power. | The new president will represent the Czech Republic abroad and appoint candidates to the constitutional court and the central bank, but does not carry much day-to-day power. |