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| Voters went to the polls on Saturday and selected two rival candidates over Baron Waqa (AFP Photo/Angela Weiss) |
Nauru's president, a strong supporter of Australia's hardline policy of detaining refugees on the tiny Pacific island nation, has lost his seat in a general election, official results showed Sunday.
Voters went
to the polls on Saturday and selected two rival candidates over Baron Waqa in
his electorate of Boe, ending the 59-year-old's six years in office.
His
successor will not be known until the 19-member parliament meets to choose a
new president, with finance minister David Adeang considered a favourite after
being re-elected.
Waqa proved
a controversial leader at times and Australia's Lowy Institute think tank last
year said the country of 11,000 "lurched towards authoritarianism"
under his leadership.
His
government has made it difficult for international media visiting Nauru to
report on conditions facing asylum seekers.
It also
introduced laws carrying heavy jail terms for political protesters and at times
curbed access to sites such as Facebook, which critics said was aimed at
curbing dissent.
Australia's
policy of processing asylum seekers on Nauru -- and the equally remote Manus
island in Papua New Guinea -- has proved an economic lifeline for a country
which exhausted its previous source of wealth: phosphate deposits used as
fertiliser.
Nauru's
government revenues ballooned from Aus$20 million (US$13 million) in 2010-11 to
Aus$115 million (US$77 million) in 2015-16 largely due to fees paid by Canberra
linked to the asylum policy, official Australian data shows.
Refugee
advocates estimate around 300 refugees remain on the island, down from a peak
of about 1,200 in 2014.
Rights
groups and the United Nations have consistently criticised the conditions faced
by refugees, warning indefinite detention causes mental health problems and
suicide attempts.
The Refugee
Action Coalition said the latest incident occurred on Friday, when a Pakistani
man it identified only as Jamal set himself on fire.
It said the
man was believed to be in a critical condition in intensive care after being
flown from Nauru to Brisbane for medical treatment.
"Jamal
is another casualty of Australia offshore detention policy. After six years on
Nauru, refugees have no secure future. They have lost hope,"
spokesman Ian Rintoul said.
"Over
300 refugees remain on Nauru, but the government has no resettlement
plans."

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