Voting starts in snap Macedonian elections

Skopje  - Voting went ahead quietly Sunday in Macedonian snap parliamentary elections, with the nationalist VMRO-DPMNE set to retain the grip on power it has held since 2006.

Some 1.7 million Macedonians are eligible to cast ballots for 20 tickets running for the 120 assembly seats, but only three other than the centre-right coalition led by the VMRO were expected to qualify for parliament.

Outgoing Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski called the elections in April, saying they were the only way out of a parliamentary paralysis. His VMRO is the clear frontrunner but is unlikely to win enough votes for an absolute majority.

The main opposition bloc led by the Social Democratic Alliance (SDSM) of Radmila Sekerinska was tipped to win only a third of the votes of Gruevski's coalition.

The crucial fight for votes was taking place among ethnic Albanians, a 25-per cent minority which dominates the north-western part of the country.

Two rival Albanian parties, the Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA) and the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI), are fighting for supremacy and a place in the next government.

The DPA is a part of the outgoing cabinet, but the DUI was predicted to win more votes. The campaign among Albanians was marred by violence.

The election is yet again, as in 2006, 2002 and in a 2004 referendum, viewed as a test of the political maturity of Macedonia, which was on the verge of a civil war in 2001.

The country remains uninvited to join NATO over the row about its name with neighbouring Greece and has not progressed much towards European Union membership since winning the status of a candidate three years ago.

Now Macedonians, concerned over secessionist aspirations among the Albanians, feel that the very survival of their country hinges on membership of the EU and particularly NATO.

Hundreds of foreign and thousands of local observers were monitoring the election process. Voting started at 7 am (0500 GMT) and would end 12 hours later.

The first unofficial results are expected hours after the voting ends and the state election commission must announce its own unofficial results within 12 hours of the close of voting. (dpa)

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