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Beirut: Arguments flare over Lebanese electoral law

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  • Beirut: Arguments flare over Lebanese electoral law

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Jan 26 2005

    Arguments flare over Lebanese electoral law
    Hariri to have 2 lists in Beirut

    By Nayla Assaf and Nada Raad
    Daily Star staff


    BEIRUT: Lebanon's draft electoral law has created furious rows
    between the country's opposition and government loyalists.

    As was widely predicted, the new law envisages the division of the
    capital into three electoral districts.

    Under the proposal the country will be divided into 26 districts.

    It also introduces two popular amendments: the lowering of the voting
    age to 18 and more controversially, it proposes allocating 30 percent
    of seats in Parliament to women.

    The Cabinet expected to formally discuss the law later this week, but
    Premier Omar Karami refuted criticisms, insisting the law could still
    be amended.

    Meanwhile, Interior Minister Suleiman Franjieh's remarks earlier this
    week in which he warned the Christian opposition against aligning
    itself with former premier Rafik Hariri in Beirut continue to cause
    controversy.

    Speaking on Sunday night, Franjieh threatened revoke the proposal to
    partition Beirut into three districts, which is largely deemed
    favorable to Christians.

    He said: "If the state feels that its stake in the electoral battle
    is under threat, it will seek its own interests and redistribute the
    cards in Beirut."

    He also said that he finally decided, in his proposal, to split Sidon
    and the Zahrani into two separate districts, following the demand of
    Speaker Nabih Berri.

    Franjieh said: "His demand was very logical. He is demanding that the
    1960 law be applied as is concerning the Sidon-Zahrani area."

    In an unusual nod to Jumblatt, Franjieh had also said that his law
    proposal did not restrict Jumblatt's power.

    Franjieh's comments were sharply criticised by Karami, who said: "I
    do not agree with [Franjieh's] comments, because we say that we have
    constitutional institutions, which judge such issues."

    Jbeil MP Fares Soueid, a prominent member of the Christian
    opposition, lashed out at Franjieh and demanded the Cabinet's
    resignation.

    "The words of Interior Minister Suleiman Franjieh yesterday were
    extremely dangerous and confirm the authorities' plans to sabotage
    opposition lists," he said.

    Speaking to the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation International,
    Soueid said: "How alliances are forged is not the business of the
    interior minister. His task should be limited to producing an
    electoral law and guaranteeing the impartiality of the state."


    Speaking after a meeting of the Democratic Gathering, Chouf MP Walid
    Jumblatt's parliamentary coalition, Baabda MP Bassem Sabaa said
    Franjieh "is trying to announce the [election] results in advance.
    The opposition will remain unified and that victory will be on its
    side despite the falsification attempts and the attempts to pressure
    public opinion."

    He added the draft electoral law was "an attempt to bribe Lebanese
    public opinion through the introduction of a quota for women and the
    lowering of the voting age to 18".

    He said: "Our position concerning the lowering of the voting age is
    well known even if the authorities introduced it in order to get more
    votes."

    Jumblatt's Progressive Socialist Party has been requesting that the
    voting age be lowered for several years.

    Sabaa also confirmed earlier claims by Jumblatt that the opposition
    will ask the United Nations to intervene in case of violations in the
    electoral process.

    Meanwhile, contrary to government expectations, former Prime Minister
    Rafik Hariri announced he will run in Beirut's third electoral
    district, and not in the first district, which includes a majority of
    Sunni voters.

    Sources close to Hariri said he will have two complete lists in
    Beirut.

    The first one in the third district, which has nine seats, is mostly
    Shiite and Armenian, and the second is in the six-seat mostly Sunni
    first district.

    But Hariri will not present a list for Achrafieh, which he will leave
    to his allies in the Christian opposition.

    lso, amid the rising tensions, President Emile Lahoud defended the
    authorities' performance, reiterating that the new electoral law will
    be fair and just and treating all regions equally.

    Lahoud also vowed the government will provide a suitable climate to
    allow elections to be held freely and in the most honest and
    transparent manner.

    He said that discussions of the draft electoral law should not resort
    to terms that spark sectarian rife and encourage domestic divisions.

    Information Minister Elie Ferzli said Tuesday that the Syrian
    authorities have chosen not to interfere in the coming parliamentary
    elections.
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