Preliminary results from yesterday's poll put Bainimarama's Fiji First Party on 60.17 per cent, with more than half the vote counted. Nearest rival Sodelpa was on 26.71 per cent, and the National Federation Party was the best of the other five on 5.66 per cent.
As of 8:00 am (0130 today IST), Fiji First had 233,094 of 387,400 ballots counted in a total of 590,000 registered voters, according to data from the Fiji Elections Office.
A multi-national observer group comprising officials from more than a dozen countries has been monitoring as voters in Fiji's 300-plus islands cast their ballots.
The group is expected to release initial findings later today on whether the poll was conducted legitimately.
Fijian officials said late yesterday that the return to democracy had been trouble free, with fears that violence could flare as it did after a 2000 coup proving unfounded.
It is seen as pivotal to ending the country's "coup culture", which saw four governments toppled between 1987 and 2006, largely due to tensions between indigenous Fijians and ethnic Indians.
Bainimarama used the military to seize power in 2006, vowing to stamp out corruption and end the racial divisions.
His authoritarian regime did bring stability, but in the process tore up the constitution, sacked the judiciary and tightened media censorship, prompting Fiji's suspension from the Commonwealth and the Pacific Islands Forum.
The restrictions he imposed have been relaxed in recent years, and winning an election deemed free and fair by neutral observers would give his government the international recognition that has so far eluded it.
Regional powers Australia and New Zealand lifted sanctions earlier this year to encourage the return to democracy, although Amnesty International still has concerns about abuses its says were perpetrated by Bainimarama.
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