Centre-left candidate Michelle Bachelet has become Chile's first
woman president, taking 53.5% of the poll with almost all the votes
counted.
Large crowds have gathered to celebrate Michelle Bachelet's win
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Her rival, conservative businessman Sebastian Pinera, has conceded defeat.
Giving a victory speech to cheering suporters, Ms
Bachelet said: "Who would have said, 10, 15 years ago, that a woman
would be elected president?"
Correspondents say Ms Bachelet's win consolidates a swing to the political left in Latin America.
The election is the fourth since Chile returned to democracy in 1990 after 17 years of military rule.
Outgoing President Ricardo Lagos hailed the election of Chile's first woman leader as a "historic triumph".
Pay homage
Mr Pinera, who had 46.5% of the vote with 97.5% counted, was also quick to congratulate Ms Bachelet.
He said he wanted to "pay homage to all those millions and millions of
women who with much strength and tenacity have finally achieved the
place and the situation they deserve in our society".
Ms Bachelet thanked the thousands of enthusiastic
supporters who gathered outside her campaign headquarters in the
capital, Santiago.
She called on the whole country to work together to
solve its problems and repeated her promise to bring more jobs and
social justice to Chile.
The BBC's Daniel Schweimler in Santiago says thousands
of people are waving flags, blowing whistles and chanting slogans in
the streets, with many more honking their horns as they drive round the
city.
It took less than three hours after the polls closed for
it to became clear the 54-year-old would be the next president, our
correspondent says, and for the celebrations to begin.
Ms Bachelet has promised continuity, as head of the
coalition which has led Chile for the past 16 years, but has also
pledged change.
She is keen to bridge the gap between rich and poor and
to give a greater voice to women and indigenous people, he adds, with
more women expected to be appointed to public office.
Unusual choice
The second round of voting was called after no candidate
secured the 50% required for outright victory in the first round in
December.
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SOUTH AMERICAN WOMEN PRESIDENTS
Michelle Bachelet - elected Chile's first woman leader, 2006
Janet Jagan - elected Guyana's leader in 1997 after the death of her husband, the previous president
Lidia Gueiler Tejada - served as interim president of Bolivia following a coup, 1979-80
Isabel Martinez de Peron - sworn in as interim
president of Argentina in 1974 when husband Juan Peron fell ill and
died; kept power until 1976
Rosalia Arteaga - briefly acted as president of Ecuador in 1997
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Ms Bachelet, who won 46% of the vote then, went into the run-off ballot leading the opinion polls.
The former defence minister will become the fourth
consecutive president from the centre-left coalition known as the
Concertacion, which has governed Chile since the end of military rule
in 1990.
A doctor and a single mother, Ms Bachelet was seen as an
unusual choice for the presidency in a country considered one of the
most socially conservative in South America.
Mr Pinera - who polled 25% in December - was given the
backing of third-placed candidate, Joaquin Lavin, who received 23% in
that vote.
However, the billionaire businessman and former senator
appears not to have picked up all the right-wing vote previously given
to Mr Lavin. |