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Anti-migrant Incumbent Favored in Czech Presidential Vote

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A woman casts her vote during the country's direct presidential election, at a polling station located in a pub in Prague, the Czech Republic, Jan. 12, 2018.
A woman casts her vote during the country's direct presidential election, at a polling station located in a pub in Prague, the Czech Republic, Jan. 12, 2018.

The Czechs are electing a new president, and eight candidates are hoping to unseat the current controversy-courting leader.

President Milos Zeman, 73, is seeking another five-year term in the largely ceremonial post and is the favorite to win the election's first-round vote on Friday and Saturday.

Two political newcomers, the former president of the Academy of Sciences, Jiri Drahos, and popular song writer Michal Horacek are considered his major challengers. Others with a chance to advance to the runoff are Mirek Topolanek, an outspoken leader who served as prime minister from 2006 to 2009, and Pavel Fischer, a former diplomat.

FILE - Czech President Milos Zeman arrives for a parliamentary session in Prague, Czech Republic, Feb. 21, 2017.
FILE - Czech President Milos Zeman arrives for a parliamentary session in Prague, Czech Republic, Feb. 21, 2017.

If no candidate achieves a majority, the top two will face each other in a runoff in two weeks.

Friday's vote was hit by a protest by Femen activists. After Zeman entered a polling station in Prague, he was approached by a female activist naked to the waist who shouted "Zeman, Putin's slut!" His guards intervened and led the shaken president away. Zeman returned several minutes later to vote and said he was honored to be attacked by a Femen activist.

Zeman was elected to the largely ceremonial post in 2013 during the country's first direct presidential vote, a victory that returned the former left-leaning prime minister to power.

In office, he's become known for strong anti-migrant rhetoric that won him support from the populist far-right. He has divided the nation with his pro-Russian stance and his support for closer ties with China.

He was one of the few European leaders to endorse Donald Trump's bid for the White House. He flew the European Union flag at Prague Castle but later used every opportunity to attack the 28-nation bloc.

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