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Hariri campaign claims victory in Beirut parliamentary election

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  • Hariri campaign claims victory in Beirut parliamentary election

    Hariri campaign claims victory in Beirut parliamentary election
    BRIAN WHITAKER IN BEIRUT

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    May 30, 2005

    Lebanese voters went to the polls yesterday at the start of the first
    parliamentary election in 30 years that has not been marred by civil
    war or heavy-handed Syrian meddling.

    The campaign, led by Saad Hariri, 35, the son of Rafik Hariri,
    the former prime minister who was assassinated in February, was
    celebrating victory after incomplete results showed it had swept
    Beirut's 19 parliamentary seats.

    The official results are not due until today, and voting in the rest
    of the country is still to come.

    But a government official, speaking on condition of anonymity,
    confirmed to the Associated Press that the Hariri campaign's
    prediction, with most of the votes counted and the ticket's margin
    of votes, was insurmountable.

    After the heady days of street demonstrations that toppled the
    Syrian-backed government and helped to drive Syrian forces out of
    the country just a few weeks ago, the first phase of the election,
    in the capital, Beirut, proved an anti-climax.

    Amid complaints of a carve-up by political leaders - 10 of the 19
    Beirut seats have already returned candidates unopposed - the big
    question was how many of the city's 420,000 electors would bother
    to vote.

    Last night, Hassan al-Sabaa, the interior minister, put turnout at
    28%, which was less than the 35% for the last election under Syrian
    domination in 2000, an embarrassment to the Hariri bloc.

    In an effort to get the voters out earlier in the day, fleets of cars
    decorated with Hariri posters, ferried supporters to the polls.

    Voting appeared fairly brisk in the morning but had dwindled to a
    trickle by early afternoon.

    An interior ministry official put the turnout during the first six
    hours at only 18.5%.

    Wearing jeans and an open-neck shirt and surrounded by bodyguards
    in suits, Mr Hariri toured the polling stations, where supporters
    showered him with rice and chanted his father's name. He also visited
    to his father's grave.

    Riding a wave of sympathy for his murdered father, who many believe
    was killed by pro-Syrian elements, he urged people to vote "against
    the criminals".

    "The people will have their say today and demonstrate their loyalty
    to Rafik Hariri," he said. "Those who are against us today do not
    want a unified country or a unified Beirut."

    Elsewhere, supporters of Christian leader Michel Aoun, who has not
    been included in Hariri's alliance, handed out stickers urging voters
    to boycott "the appointments" (as they describe the election).

    The Armenian Tashnag party, which is also disaffected over the backroom
    electoral deals, issued leaflets saying: "No participation without
    proper representation for all in Beirut."

    At a polling station near the American University, one disgruntled
    voter said he was supporting an independent candidate. "We are not
    against Saad Hariri," he said, "but we don't want the people that he
    has put here for us. We want to choose our own people."

    More than 100 observers from the EU and UN watched the vote for
    irregularities, the first time Lebanon has permitted foreign scrutiny.

    "I see it as a potential for a new start," US senator Joseph Biden,
    who came to watch the balloting, told Associated Press. Mr Biden
    said the new parliament may not be fundamentally different from the
    previous one, but said the atmosphere had improved because "there's
    an occupying force that's gone".
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