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  • Beirut: Uneven turnout as Lebanese vote

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    May 10 2004

    Uneven turnout as Lebanese vote
    christians allegedly unhappy with election law

    By Nayla Assaf
    Daily Star staff


    BEIRUT: The municipal council elections in the capital were marked
    by an extremely low turnout Sunday, a sharp contrasted with voter
    participation in Baalbek.

    In the Bekaa, turnout levels varied greatly from one region to
    another, but overall it was much higher than Beirut, with 70 percent
    in Baalbek and 40 percent in Zahle.

    Beirut, on the other hand, had a 23 percent turnout - half what the
    Interior Ministry projected.

    Apart from the arrest of seven Free Patriotic Movement (FPM)
    supporters for 30 minutes in Achrafieh, no wide-scale clashes were
    reported. But observers said participation was extremely low among
    Christian voters due to "an unjust electoral law" seen by many as
    unlikely to bring about a representative council.

    Interior Minister Elias Murr dismissed such claims Sunday evening,
    saying turnout was low among Christians and Muslims.

    According to Ziad Baroud, the secretary-general of the Lebanese
    Association for Democratic Elections, three major irregularities
    took place throughout the day: including a marked delay in issuing
    voting cards and a delay opening doors for voters in some polling
    stations - caused by a lack of representatives.

    The electoral law stipulates there should be at least two campaign
    delegates for two different lists present in each station.

    "We did not see any tangible evidence of bribery, but there were
    repeated reports of bribery coming from throughout Beirut," Baroud
    said, adding that the low voter turnout was proof that there is a
    problem in the municipal law.

    "While the Bekaa had an acceptable turnout, the level in Beirut was
    extremely low, which is proof that people feel the elections will not
    be representative of their choice," he said. "It is unfair that
    Beirut was divided into three districts for the parliamentary
    elections of 2000 and that it remains one district for the municipal
    elections."

    Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, one of the heavyweights in the Beirut
    elections, was among the first to vote, reportedly casting his ballot
    at his Bliss Street registry at 7.30am.

    Hariri called on voters to "vote, vote and vote," reiterating his
    campaign slogan.

    "Elections are a guarantee of democracy. If we want a true democratic
    system, we have to vote," he said, adding that he was convinced that
    Beirut voters would vote for "coexistence."

    On the other hand, former MP Najah Wakim, backing the opposition
    list, said: "Hariri was trying to avoid an electoral battle in
    Beirut, but the opposition list changed these calculations by forming
    a second list."

    According to Wakim, the opposition produced a democratic environment
    by offering Beirut voters a choice.

    He then lashed out at Hariri, insinuating that the premier was buying
    votes.

    "Our list will now force Hariri to add some $3 million and buy more
    votes," Wakim said.

    Although Wakim doubted that his list would achieve a considerable
    victory, he said it has already achieved a political victory, because
    it was able to form an opposition list.

    Asked about the accusation that the Hariri-backed list bribed voters,
    Beirut MP Ghattas Khoury, who is a member of Hariri's bloc said,
    "those are mere rumors."

    Khoury, who along with most of Hariri's MPs was taking an active role
    on the ground, said the Hariri-backed list did not need to resort to
    bribery "since it is the only complete, multi-color list in Beirut."

    This confidence was displayed by the entire Hariri camp throughout
    the day.

    Campaigners for the list were the most numerous in all stations
    visited by The Daily Star, with the delegates of the
    opposition-backed Dignity and Change list also showing a high
    presence.

    As for the third list, the Beirut's People list, its presence was
    mostly noticeable in the areas of Raouche, Aisha Bakkar and Mazraa.

    Many Christian voters were reportedly discouraged by the elections
    and either failed to show up or only voted for the mukhtars and not
    for municipal council members.

    This, according to a source at the FPM was due to the lukewarm
    backing of other Christian opposition parties. Another source
    attributed this lack of participation as "remnants of the traditional
    mindset which allocates areas as turfs to one leader or another."

    The source said that most opposition parties cannot shake off this
    mindset and allow themselves to make deals with Hariri by "staying
    away from his turf, so he would stay away from theirs."

    The FPM considers that it led the battle almost solo with Wakim and
    the Communist Party since the Phalange opposition, the Lebanese
    Forces and the Qornet Shehwan Christian opposition group did not
    truly encourage their supporters to vote, despite the fact that they
    were officially backing the opposition list.

    "With Hariri's circles spreading news that their victory is
    guaranteed and after the defeats in Mount Lebanon, our opponents were
    able to hold a systematic discouragement campaign," he said. "As to
    our allies, I think that they were telling their followers under the
    table to only vote for mukhtars," he added.

    In the Bekaa, Syria had put its political weight in an attempt to
    block all opposition parties from getting hold of winning municipal
    seats. The alliance between Hizbullah and the Lebanon branch of the
    pro-Syria Baath Party prevailed on the ground over all other
    alliances, such as those between the Communists, Nationalist and Amal
    Movement.

    Christian opposition parties such as the LF, the FPM and the Phalange
    Rank and File failed to form complete lists or be included in the
    major lists in such key Christian towns as Zahle and other villages
    of the Western Bekaa.

    The hotspots of the Bekaa were the towns of Zahle and Baalbek, where
    the race remained mostly between different loyalist parties. What was
    noticeable in both was the near-absence of Christian opposition.

    In many villages, Hizbullah and Amal headed opposing lists. Sheikh
    Naim Qassem, Hizbullah's deputy secretary-general, even lashed out at
    the Amal list on Saturday, calling them "enemies of god," which they
    felt was insulting.

    According to Justice Minister Bahij Tabbara, 70 judges were
    dispatched to oversee the tabulation committees. He also said that
    last week's delay in the issuing of the results for Mount Lebanon has
    compelled the ministry to dispatch seven additional tabulation
    committees.

    The municipal council for Beirut, the largest in the country, holds
    24 seats, while there are 108 seats for mukhtars, which are
    distributed in the capital's three districts.

    Among the 420,000 eligible voters for Beirut, only 210,000 voters had
    electoral cards and a meager 75,000 voted.

    The major lists for Beirut were the Beirut Dignity list headed by
    current Mayor Abdel-Monem Aris and backed by Hariri and the
    opposition list called Dignity and Change and backed mainly by the
    FPM, Wakim's People's Movement, the Communist Party and other
    Christian poles of influence such as the Phalange opposition and the
    LF.

    The third list, the Beirut's People List had five Muslim names and
    was headed by Itani.

    In the previous elections of 1998, Hariri's list had won 23 out of 24
    seats.


    Foul play?


    BEIRUT: Hizbullah campaign delegates in Achrafieh, Port and Mazraa
    were seen distributing to voters the list supported by Premier Rafik
    Hariri, with the name of Amal Movement Fadi Shahrour crossed out.

    Standing in front of Gemmayzeh's Sacre Coeur School, black-clad
    Hizbullah women distributed a list to The Daily Star with Shahrour's
    name crossed out. A few seconds later, a delegate snatched the paper
    from the reporter and handed out a second list, on which Shahrour's
    name was included. "The other delegate made a mistake and gave you
    the wrong paper," she said.

    But, the "mistake" was not unique, as all other delegates were
    distributing the list without Shahrour's name.

    Hizbullah politburo member Ghaleb Abu Zeinab insisted that the party
    was "committed to the agreement we made with Hariri, and we will not
    cross out any names on the list.

    "I don't know how to explain the accident," he said.

    However, Imad Mahed, an Amal Movement representative in Beirut, said
    Shahrour's name was indeed crossed out from the list, and that ballot
    boxes will reveal this.

    In several polling stations, campaign delegates for the Tashnak Party
    were handing voters a paper where they should write their name in
    Armenian, as well as where they voted, and the ID number of their
    electoral card.

    Some considered such action an "anti-democratic attempt from the
    party to control the election."

    The Lebanese Association for Democratic Elections checked the paper
    and found "no illegal" substance in its content. LADE
    secretary-general Ziad Baroud said, "We called the Tashnak Party to
    ask them why they were using this paper. They said it was for
    organizational purposes."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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