Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09KOLONIA38
2009-03-27 07:25:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Kolonia
Cable title:  

ELECTION DISPUTES IN CHUUK DELAY ANTICIPATED RUNOFF

Tags:  PGOV SOCI PHUM FM 
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VZCZCXRO1577
PP RUEHKN RUEHKR RUEHMJ
DE RUEHKN #0038/01 0860725
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P R 270725Z MAR 09
FM AMEMBASSY KOLONIA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2239
INFO RUEHMJ/AMEMBASSY MAJURO 0413
RHMFIUU/COMNAVMARIANAS GU
RHHJJPI/PACOM IDHS HONOLULU HI
RUEHKN/AMEMBASSY KOLONIA 2602
RUEHKR/AMEMBASSY KOROR 0313
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KOLONIA 000038 

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SOCI PHUM FM
SUBJECT: ELECTION DISPUTES IN CHUUK DELAY ANTICIPATED RUNOFF
ELECTION

REF: A. A) KOLONIA 28

B. B) WEMHOENER-CUITE TO NEVILLE 27/3/09 E-MAIL AND PREVIOUS

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KOLONIA 000038

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SOCI PHUM FM
SUBJECT: ELECTION DISPUTES IN CHUUK DELAY ANTICIPATED RUNOFF
ELECTION

REF: A. A) KOLONIA 28

B. B) WEMHOENER-CUITE TO NEVILLE 27/3/09 E-MAIL AND PREVIOUS


1. (U) Summary: FSM national and Chuuk State elections took
place on March 3, but state candidates still dispute the
results. On March 26, the Chuuk State Supreme Court decided to
hold a revote for voters in Honolulu on April 1 and hold the
gubernatorial runoff election between the top two vote getters
on April 6. The final outcome remains unclear. End Summary.

Gubernatorial Dispute and Court Decision
--------------


2. (U) On March 11, gubernatorial candidate and former FSM Vice
President Redley Killion submitted a complaint to the Chuuk
State Supreme Court, contesting the results of the March 3
election (ref B). In the complaint, Killion raised concerns
about count discrepancies from numerous polling sites. The
complaints stated that final vote counts did not match the
counts originally tallied in front of poll watchers. Individual
complaints ranged from the single digits to approximately 60 at
one site. The primary complaint, however, was that the
government prevented approximately 800 voters in Hawaii from
voting due to a disturbance at the polling site. According to
the official results, Killion finished third in the election by
about 120 votes.


3. (U) Chuuk State Assistant Attorney General Jason Robert
confirmed to Political LES that the Chuuk State Supreme Court
accepted Killion's complaint and determined that the state must
hold a revote at the Honolulu polling site on April 1. In
conjunction with this decision, the Court determined that the
ballots should be counted immediately on site. Chuuk electoral
regulations mandate that the state hold runoff elections between
the top two vote getters in the event that no candidate receives
a clear majority, within four weeks of the original vote. Thus
the court postponed the runoff election until April 6. (Note:
With the current count it will be impossible for any one
candidate to obtain a clear majority through a revote in
Honolulu alone. End Note.)

Outcome Still to be Determined
--------------


4. (SBU) In his explanation of the recent court decision on
Killion's case, Assistant AG Robert added that legal proceedings
may not be over. Doone may decide to contest the decision or

complain about other areas that Killion did not address. Due to
other possible but not yet submitted cases, Robert was not
sanguine about a revote taking place in Honolulu on April 1 as
currently scheduled.


5. (SBU) In a meeting between FSM President Emmanuel Mori and
Ambassador Hughes, Mori predicted that despite the many ups and
downs in Chuuk, incumbent Governor Wesley Simina would
eventually hold on to his position. FSM Foreign Secretary Lorin
Robert (Chuuk) observed that the one true surprise was the
amount of votes that Gillian Doone garnered. Although Doone is
not making the promises of political largess that the other
candidates are, he is clearly galvanizing a significant segments
of voters who are registering a desire for change. Doone has
not followed the traditional campaigning method of providing
rice and other presents to supporters. Instead he has used a
limited budget to use a CB radio to reach out to outer islands
and focused his message on "issues." Secretary Robert further
contended that Simina hopes that Killion wins his court case and
subsequent revote because the amount of attention Doone is
generating is not in Simina's interest.

Other Complaints
--------------


6. (U) In a letter addressed to Mori and many others, Chuuk
State Senator Peter Aten asked the federal government to
implement marshal law as a means to enforce an orderly revote in
Chuuk. Aten contends the initial state level elections were
fraudulently conducted and require national oversight to correct
the many wrong doings. Per the official ballot count, Aten, who
had a reputation as a rising young leader in the Senate from the
Faichuuk region, lost his bid for reelection.


7. (SBU) Bill Jaynes, editor of the only newspaper in the FSM,
informed DCM Douglass that Attorney Kembo Mida is claiming there
are serious allegations of fraud in Chuuk. Mida currently
represents Killion. According to Jaynes, the allegations may be
enough to "throw the entire election in doubt." He plans to
publish some of the allegations in the next edition of the
Kaselehlie Press (scheduled for an April 1 release).


KOLONIA 00000038 002 OF 002


Comment
--------------


8. (SBU) To date Chuuk remains peaceful, but complaints about
the state level elections continue to mount. Rumors also
continue to swirl about whether or not Killion and Doone will
eventually work together to replace Simina. Killion is
distantly related to Simina and thus some of his extended family
supporters may switch to Simina owing to clan allegiances in a
runoff election. The state elections in Chuuk clearly were not
incident free, from ballot stuffing (ref A) to voter
disenfranchisement, and more importantly they are not yet over.
President Mori absented himself from a long anticipated ground
breaking ceremony for reconstruction of the main road in the
capital island of Weno on March 26 in order to avoid any
appearance of favoritism. Chuuk remains volatile and any
outcome is still possible, including the still remote
possibility of violence. End Comment.
HUGHES