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Bhutan elects new party to form government

Bhutan has now chosen a different party to rule at each election since the end of absolute monarchy in 2008

Bhutan's voters on Thursday gave an overwhelming victory to a new party headed by a surgeon in only the third democratic election held by the Himalayan kingdom, according to provisional results. The result means the country of 800,000 people, wedged between giant neighbours China and India, will have chosen a different party to rule at each election since the absolute monarchy was ended in 2008. The centre-left Druk Nyamrup Tshogpa (DNT), which was only formed in 2013, won 30 of the national assembly's 47 seats, according to the results which are to be officially confirmed on Friday. Druk Phuensum Tshogpa (DPT) secured the other 17 seats in the runoff contest limited to the two parties who led a first round of voting in September, with the former ruling party ending up in third place. DNT leader Lotay Tshering, a 50-year-old urology surgeon who trained in Bangladesh and Australia, vowed to work for "nation building" in the country which is battling high foreign debt, mainly owed to India, as well as youth employment, rural poverty and criminal gangs. Both parties had campaigned on promises to boost the economy with Tshering's party using the slogan "Narrowing The Gap". The DPT, which won Bhutan's first election in 2008 but did not get a seat in 2013, had wanted to accelerate the building of hydropower plants which dominate the economy, with electricity mainly exported to India. The DNT has been more wary about increasing Bhutan's debt to pay for more power plants. Hydropower financing -- which comes to more than $1.5 billion -- accounts for more than 80 percent of Bhutan's foreign debt. Most is owed to India, which has financed four out of five of the kingdom's new hydro-electric projects.