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Beirut residents vote in first election free of Syrian meddling toel

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  • Beirut residents vote in first election free of Syrian meddling toel

    Beirut residents vote in first election free of Syrian meddling to elect Hariri's son
    ZEINA KARAM

    AP Worldstream
    May 30, 2005

    Riding a sympathy vote, the son of slain former Prime Minister Rafik
    Hariri appeared headed toward victory in parliamentary elections in
    Beirut, the first in the country to be held largely free of Syrian
    domination.

    Voters turned out, albeit in small numbers, Sunday to pay tribute
    to the leader whose February assassination triggered international
    anger and street protests that ultimately drove the Syrian army out
    of Lebanon.

    The list led by Saad Hariri, the son of the assassinated former
    premier, was celebrating victory Sunday night after incomplete results
    showed it had swept Beirut's 19 parliamentary seats.

    Official results are not due until Monday, and voting in the rest of
    the country is still to come.

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

    Many observers expect the polls, the first free of Syrian meddling
    in 29 years, to sweep the anti-Syrian opposition to power and install
    a new parliament, removing the last vestiges of Damascus' control.

    "This is the first time I voted in my life," said 70-year-old Elaine
    Antoun, smiling as she emerged from a polling station in Beirut's
    mainly Christian Ashrafiyeh district. "The past few months made me
    feel there might be hope yet for this country."

    After polls closed, Interior Minister Hassan Sabei said unofficial
    results showed voter turnout in Beirut was about 28 percent compared
    with 35 percent in the 2000 parliamentary elections.

    The weak turnout reflected public dissatisfaction amid calls for a
    boycott, complaints that the ticket of Saad Hariri, a Sunni Muslim,
    lacked representation of political factions, and lack of challengers
    in some constituencies. Television stations reported that the boycott
    was mainly in Christian parts of the city.

    Hundreds of Hariri supporters danced and cheered outside the family's
    palatial residence in Beirut's Koreitem neighborhood as returns tallied
    by his campaign showed the Hariri slate winning Beirut's 10 contested
    seats. Fireworks lit the night sky as the Hariri family went to the
    grave of the slain leader late Sunday to pray.

    The Hariri list won the city's other nine uncontested seats by default.

    With 90 percent of the vote counted, Saad Hariri received over 35,000
    ballots and was the biggest vote-getter in Beirut, his campaign said.

    Sunday's vote, which Sabei called "trouble-free," was the first stage
    of a four-part election. Other regions of Lebanon vote on the next
    three Sundays.

    There was one minor incident, when fistfights broke out late Sunday
    between supporters of opposition leader Walid Jumblatt and rival
    Najah Wakim.

    The two sides threw bottles and rocks at each other before security
    forces intervened and restored calm, witnesses said.

    Stefane Dujarric, a spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General said Kofi
    Annan was very encouraged byA theA democraticA conduct of the first
    round of the Lebanese parliamentary elections and hoped the remaining
    rounds would take place in the same peaceful atmosphere.

    "These elections constitute a major opportunity for the Lebanese people
    to shape their own future, to strengthen their political institutions
    and to restore their full sovereignty," he said.

    Rafik Hariri's widow, Nazek, led the voting, arriving within an hour
    of polls opening at 7 a.m. (0400GMT) to cast her ballots. Polls closed
    11 hours later.

    "I have high hopes today that we will uncover the truth of who planned
    and carried out the crime against my beloved husband, who in life
    built this country and in his martyrdom achieved national unity,"
    Nazek Hariri told reporters after voting.

    The vote was watched closely by the United States and other outside
    governments that pushed for a Syrian troop withdrawal and on-time
    elections, despite a divisive election law.

    Syrian forces withdrew in April after mass demonstrations in Lebanon
    and relentless international pressure sparked by the February
    assassination of the former premier. The Feb. 14 bombing also killed
    20 others.

    More than 100 observers from the European Union and the United
    Nations watched the vote for irregularities, the first time Lebanon
    has permitted foreign scrutiny.

    "I see it as a potential for a new start," U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden,
    who came to watch the balloting, told The Associated Press.

    The Delaware Democrat acknowledged that 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."

    In a statement issued by U.N. headquarters in Beirut, U.N. envoy Terje
    Roed-Larsen said the elections "represent a significant step for the
    Lebanese people in their quest for recovering their full political
    independence and sovereignty."

    About 420,000 people were eligible to vote in Beirut. At stake were
    19 of the legislature's 128 seats, divided equally among Muslims
    and Christians.

    For some, elections free of Syrian influence provided a chance for
    a new beginning.

    "I am voting for the future," said Yehia Arakji, a 62-year-old merchant
    who voted for Hariri's list in Beirut's Muslim sector. "It is time
    for the Lebanese to decide their own fate."

    Others expressed frustration with an election law that marginalized
    many factions, and infighting that has splintered the opposition.

    "I am doing my duty by voting, but I don't have much hope," said
    Wardeh Hamad, 40. "The politicians wasted an opportunity, each went
    his own way."

    Prime Minister Najib Mikati repeated Sunday the widely proclaimed
    contention that the election law drawn up in 2000 during the Syrian
    era was unfair, but said the elections were still "an important
    achievement."

    Saad Hariri urged voters to go to the polls on his father's behalf.

    "We say to people go out and vote to show gratitude to that person
    who sacrificed his blood and life," he said.

    Those calling for a boycott were mainly followers of Christian
    opposition leader Michel Aoun, who is fielding his own candidates
    elsewhere in the country. His supporters, wearing orange T-shirts,
    stood outside polling stations distributing paper slips that read
    "Boycott the appointments."

    The main Armenian political party, Tashnag, also urged supporters
    to boycott.

    Wakim criticized the Hariri ticket and what he called the power
    of money.

    "I wish we had a thousandth or a millionth of their money so we could
    fight in all of Beirut," he said.

    Rafik Hariri _ who was prime minister for 10 of the last 15 years and
    credited with rebuilding Lebanon from the destruction of the 1975-90
    civil war _ was a billionaire businessman.
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