Kazakhstan's President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev casts his ballot at a polling station in Almaty, Kazakhstan, November 20, 2022. /CFP
Kazakhstan's incumbent president Kassym-Jomart Tokayev secured a second term in Sunday's snap election, winning 81.31 percent of the vote, the central Asian nation's Central Election Commission said on Monday, citing preliminary data.
He had been widely expected to extend his rule over the oil-rich nation by seven more years with a strong mandate to continue his increasingly independent foreign policy.
"We can say that the people have expressed convincing confidence in me as president and all of you," Tokayev, 69, had told his staff earlier, referring to exit polls that favored him.
The campaign would "go down in history," the former diplomat added.
Voter turnout was 69.44 percent, with five other candidates scoring in the low single digits, data showed. Voters' second most popular choice was "against everyone," which got 5.8 percent of ballots.
Prompted by the exit polls, several fellow central Asian leaders congratulated Tokayev on Monday before the preliminary results.
Tokayev won his first election in 2019 with the backing of predecessor Nursultan Nazarbayev, but the two fell out this year amid violent unrest in the nation of 20 million, and Sunday's vote consolidated his power as an independent leader.
(With input from Reuters)