Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BEIRUT: Murr Plans To Contest Metn Election Results

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BEIRUT: Murr Plans To Contest Metn Election Results

    MURR PLANS TO CONTEST METN ELECTION RESULTS
    By Nicholas Kimbrell

    Daily Star
    June 17 2009
    Lebanon

    MP challenges 'irregularities' in Armenian vote

    BEIRUT: MP Michel Murr announced Tuesday that he plans to contest
    election results in the Metn district due to alleged irregularities
    in the Armenian vote. Murr, a powerful independent aligned with the
    victorious March 14 coalition during the polls, said a sizable increase
    in ballots cast by Armenian voters and the presence of forged ID cards
    "raised suspicion" over the legitimacy of the Metn's results.

    "When we have all our evidence and proof ready, we will challenge
    the results and call on the Constitutional Council to annul votes
    from suspicious polling stations and correct the results," Murr said
    during a press conference.

    "Six MPs from the March 14-Independent Salvation List should win in
    the Metn District," he added.

    Despite the March 14 majority's national victory, Murr and the Phalange
    party's Sami Gemayel were the only candidates to break the opposition's
    Metn list in the June 7 parliamentary polls. The six remaining seats
    went to Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement or its allies, including
    the popular Armenian Tashnag party.

    Citing estimates by the Tashnag's Metn MP Hagop Pakradounian, Murr
    said Armenian participation in the polls increased from the 2007
    by-election from 9,200 votes to 13,700, despite an increase of only
    500 registered voters.

    He also said his staff had discovered a collection of forged ID cards
    and alleged that opposition supporters had used them to vote. He
    presented one of the cards at the press gathering and said some had
    been sent to the Interior Ministry. He did not specify whether the
    IDs were forged for Armenian voters.

    In the 2005 parliamentary elections, Murr had been aligned with Aoun
    and the Tashnag party, but that alliance broke before June, with Murr
    deciding to run on the March 14-Independent list. The Tashnag, having
    strong ties to both Murr and Aoun, opted to support the opposition
    list with the addition of Murr.

    But following the election, Murr questioned whether he received the
    full support of the Armenians as arranged. The accusation sparked an
    exchange with Pakradounian last week with each claiming responsibility
    for the other's electoral success.

    Speaking Tuesday at a meeting between members of Aoun's parliamentary
    bloc, Pakradounian, who ran uncontested in the election, said Murr
    "is free to file complaints about this issue."

    He called Murr an "old friend" and said 2,200 Tashnag supporters
    voted for him, a lower number than Murr would have liked.

    "People crossed him out for reasons that both the voters and Murr
    know," he said, adding: "We are citizens and no one determines how
    we elect and who we elect ... Whoever wins thanks us; and whoever
    loses curses us."

    Pakradounian also criticized those parties in Lebanon which "don't
    consider Armenians as Christians or Lebanese."

    "The Armenians are a basic pillar of this nation whether they like
    it or not," he said.

    Murr is not the only MP who has vowed to challenge the Metn results
    through the Constitutional Council, the only body with the authority
    to adjudicate post-election disputes. Aoun has also promised to lodge
    an official complaint targeting Murr.

    "We will file a contestation before the Constitutional Council against
    MP Michel Murr on charges of intimidation and threats," the FPM leader
    said last Wednesday in his first public appearance following the polls.

    The Metn was one of the most fiercely contested districts ahead of
    the polls and post-election challenges were not unexpected.

    The turmoil, however, has extended beyond the political class.

    Murr said on Tuesday that he hoped the judiciary would deal decisively
    with Syriac priest Elias Akari, who he referred to as "the ungrateful
    father."

    OTV, an Aoun-run television station, aired an audio tape in which
    a voice said to be Murr's threatened Akari over the elections and
    a loan, reminding the priest of his son's position as the defense
    minister. On Monday, Murr announced that he would sue OTV.

    The Syriac Orthodox Church has also gotten involved, filing a law
    suit against Akari and accusing him of embezzling funds, forgery
    and bribery.

    Apart from his decision to challenge the Metn results, Murr
    endorsed Future Movement leader MP Saad Hariri for the post of prime
    minister and Amal chief and Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri for
    the Speakership.
Working...
X