Off the wire
Feature: A fight into China's sports market  • Crowded int'l cricket schedule is unsustainable: Aust'n coach  • 14 dead amid heavy rain in S China  • Putin may meet Turkish president before G20 summit: Kremlin  • Cambodia's Justice Minister requests parliament to remove immunity of 2 opposition lawmakers  • Cambodian PM urges people not to catch fish during ban season  • Indian stocks close higher  • 2 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank  • Spaniards hit the road as tourist season starts  • Xi stresses reform on CPC anniversary  
You are here:   Home

2nd LD Writethru: Austrian presidential election to be re-held following successful court challenge

Xinhua, July 1, 2016 Adjust font size:

The Austrian Constitutional Court (VfGH) ruled Friday in favor of a challenge to the result of the May 22 presidential election run-off round, concluding that a repeat election will need to be held.

VfGH president Gerhart Holzinger said at the presentation of the findings in Vienna that the vote will be re-held nationwide, not simply in some electoral districts as media had speculated may happen.

The decision largely came down to a lax handling of postal votes, he stated.

Holzinger said irregularities that occurred in the counting of the postal votes in 14 electoral districts, such as their opening without the required presence of electoral authorities.

He said that no direct evidence of vote manipulation had been indicated to have occurred by any electoral authorities who were questioned by the court during proceedings.

At the same time, Holzinger noted that the proper procedure for vote counting had been violated. As such, no proof that any vote manipulation took place was even necessary, he added.

He said that while the decision "makes no one a winner and no one a loser," it serves one primary purpose, to strengthen trust in rule of law and as a result democracy.

"Voting is one of the fundamentals of our democracy," Holzinger said, adding that it is the duty of his court to protect this.

The result comes in favor of the challenge put forth by the far-right Freedom Party, whose candidate Norbert Hofer narrowly lost the election to challenger Alexander Van der Bellen, former Greens leader.

It marks the first time a federal election will have been re-held across the entirety of the country, as opposed to only selected regions. Enditem