<p>Retired NATO general Petr Pavel beat billionaire former prime minister Andrej Babis in a presidential election run-off Saturday, interim results showed.</p>.<p>Pavel, a former paratrooper, won 56.76 per cent of votes while Babis scored 43.23 per cent, with over 85 per cent of the vote counted, according to the Czech Statistical Office.</p>.<p>Turnout in the EU and NATO member country of 10.5 million people was unusually high at 70 per cent following an acrimonious campaign marked by controversy, death threats and a brazen hoax.</p>.<p>The 61-year-old Pavel will replace President Milos Zeman, an outspoken and divisive politician who fostered close ties with Moscow before making a U-turn when Russia invaded Ukraine last year.</p>.<p>Pavel already beat Babis in the first round two weeks ago, scoring 35.4 per cent against 35 per cent for the former prime minister.</p>.<p>Since then, Babis and his family have been targeted by death threats, while Pavel was the victim of a hoax claiming he was dead as disinformation plagued the final campaign.</p>.<p>While the role is largely ceremonial, the Czech president names the government, picks the central bank governor and constitutional judges, and serves as commander of the armed forces.</p>.<p>Voting in the small town of Dobrichovice southwest of Prague on an overcast Saturday morning, Irena Cihelkova told <em>AFP</em> the new president should serve the country well.</p>.<p>"He should be forthcoming and friendly, an asset for the country, and not make problems abroad like some other Czech statesmen," she said.</p>.<p>Pavel will be the fourth president of the Czech Republic since it emerged as an independent state after a peaceful split with Slovakia in 1993, four years after Czechoslovakia shed four-decades of totalitarian communist rule.</p>.<p>His predecessors were Vaclav Havel, an anti-communist dissident playwright who led the country from 1993-2003, economist Vaclav Klaus (2003-2013) and Zeman, whose final term expires in March.</p>.<p>A graduate of a military university, Pavel was decorated as a hero in the Serbo-Croatian war when he helped free French troops from a war zone.</p>.<p>He rose to chief of the Czech general staff and chair of NATO's military committee.</p>.<p>Like Babis, Pavel was a member of the Communist Party in the 1980s.</p>.<p>But, the man with a carefully trimmed beard and white hair, who has a passion for powerful motorbikes, has since become a strong advocate of EU and NATO membership.</p>.<p>"We have no better alternative. We should use all opportunities offered by membership and try to change that which we don't like," he said on his campaign website.</p>.<p>"Czechia is a sovereign state and a full member, therefore we can't just sit quietly, nod and then slam the result. We have to be more active and, at the same time, constructive."</p>.<p>Pavel has vowed to be an independent president unaffected by party politics and to continue to support aid to war-torn Ukraine as well as its bid to become an EU member.</p>.<p>"Naturally, Ukraine first has to meet all conditions to become a member, such as progress in battling corruption. But I believe it is entitled to get the same chance we got in the past," he said.</p>.<p>Pavel has also backed same-sex marriage and child adoptions by same-sex couples.</p>.<p>"I respect the principle of freedom and equality of all people under the law," he said. "I also believe we are a tolerant society."</p>
<p>Retired NATO general Petr Pavel beat billionaire former prime minister Andrej Babis in a presidential election run-off Saturday, interim results showed.</p>.<p>Pavel, a former paratrooper, won 56.76 per cent of votes while Babis scored 43.23 per cent, with over 85 per cent of the vote counted, according to the Czech Statistical Office.</p>.<p>Turnout in the EU and NATO member country of 10.5 million people was unusually high at 70 per cent following an acrimonious campaign marked by controversy, death threats and a brazen hoax.</p>.<p>The 61-year-old Pavel will replace President Milos Zeman, an outspoken and divisive politician who fostered close ties with Moscow before making a U-turn when Russia invaded Ukraine last year.</p>.<p>Pavel already beat Babis in the first round two weeks ago, scoring 35.4 per cent against 35 per cent for the former prime minister.</p>.<p>Since then, Babis and his family have been targeted by death threats, while Pavel was the victim of a hoax claiming he was dead as disinformation plagued the final campaign.</p>.<p>While the role is largely ceremonial, the Czech president names the government, picks the central bank governor and constitutional judges, and serves as commander of the armed forces.</p>.<p>Voting in the small town of Dobrichovice southwest of Prague on an overcast Saturday morning, Irena Cihelkova told <em>AFP</em> the new president should serve the country well.</p>.<p>"He should be forthcoming and friendly, an asset for the country, and not make problems abroad like some other Czech statesmen," she said.</p>.<p>Pavel will be the fourth president of the Czech Republic since it emerged as an independent state after a peaceful split with Slovakia in 1993, four years after Czechoslovakia shed four-decades of totalitarian communist rule.</p>.<p>His predecessors were Vaclav Havel, an anti-communist dissident playwright who led the country from 1993-2003, economist Vaclav Klaus (2003-2013) and Zeman, whose final term expires in March.</p>.<p>A graduate of a military university, Pavel was decorated as a hero in the Serbo-Croatian war when he helped free French troops from a war zone.</p>.<p>He rose to chief of the Czech general staff and chair of NATO's military committee.</p>.<p>Like Babis, Pavel was a member of the Communist Party in the 1980s.</p>.<p>But, the man with a carefully trimmed beard and white hair, who has a passion for powerful motorbikes, has since become a strong advocate of EU and NATO membership.</p>.<p>"We have no better alternative. We should use all opportunities offered by membership and try to change that which we don't like," he said on his campaign website.</p>.<p>"Czechia is a sovereign state and a full member, therefore we can't just sit quietly, nod and then slam the result. We have to be more active and, at the same time, constructive."</p>.<p>Pavel has vowed to be an independent president unaffected by party politics and to continue to support aid to war-torn Ukraine as well as its bid to become an EU member.</p>.<p>"Naturally, Ukraine first has to meet all conditions to become a member, such as progress in battling corruption. But I believe it is entitled to get the same chance we got in the past," he said.</p>.<p>Pavel has also backed same-sex marriage and child adoptions by same-sex couples.</p>.<p>"I respect the principle of freedom and equality of all people under the law," he said. "I also believe we are a tolerant society."</p>