The Niagara Falls Review

Low turnout worries politician­s

Election in Lebanon plagued by frustratio­n and apathy leaving door open for outsiders

- PHILIP ISSA AND BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — Lebanon’s first national elections in nine years were marked by a tepid turnout Sunday, reflecting voter frustratio­n over endemic corruption and a stagnant economy. Politician­s urged citizens to vote and security forces struggled to maintain order as fights broke out in and around polling stations.

President Michel Aoun appealed to voters to vote in a televised address an hour before polls closed.

“If you want change, you should exercise your right” to vote, he said in a message published on Twitter at the same time.

The elections are the first since war broke out in neighbouri­ng Syria in 2011, sending more than one million refugees to Lebanon, a small country with an estimated population of around 4.5 million.

The war has divided the country, pitting parties supporting the Iran-sponsored Hezbollah’s interventi­on in Syria to aide President Bashar Assad against Saudi-aligned parties opposed to it.

Official results are not expected to be announced before Monday.

But low turnout — between 30 and 40 per cent in Beirut precincts according to the country’s National News Agency — betrayed widespread voter apathy for the main political currents governing the country and left open the possibilit­y that outside candidates could win seats in the parliament.

“These leaders are destroying homes, not building them,” said Ahmad Khashouq, 43, a private security guard in Beirut. Khashouq, from the town of Zahle in the country’s Bekaa Valley, said he was not voting in the elections after feeling his vote was wasted in 2009, the last time elections were held.

More than 500 candidates are running for 128 seats in Lebanon’s National Assembly.

Fist fights broke out in and around polling stations around the country, as rival partisans accused each other and election officials of ballot stuffing and illegal campaignin­g.

In the Choueifat district, a crowd inside a station accused the station supervisor of illegal voting practices and smashed a ballot box, spilling its contents across the floor.

The army ordered the media to turn off their cameras.

In Zahle, the politician Mryiam Skaff blamed members of the right-wing Lebanese Forces party of beating up her supporters in polling stations.

The voting is unlikely to change the existing balance of power among the major political factions in Lebanon, but many hope new contenders from civil society groups can challenge the decades-old sectarian political system.

Sarah Brjawi, 33, said she was voting for Nouhad Yazbek, a woman candidate running on a coalition list of political independen­ts and activists running in Beirut.

Brjawi, who was walking the streets of Beirut’s Ras el-Nabea neighbourh­ood with her clown troupe before voting, said she was perplexed by voters who said they supported their satirical act, poking fun at the country’s endemic corruption and political stagnation, while saying they’d vote for establishm­ent parties again.

“This country is really bipolar,” said Brjawi.

The main race is between a Western and Saudi-backed coalition headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri and the Iranianbac­ked Hezbollah group, part of a regionwide power struggle that is tearing apart the Middle East.

“This shows Lebanon’s democracy and the importance of democracy. This is a democratic wedding, and as we said from the start, congratula­tions to whoever wins tonight,” said Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk, who is running on Hariri’s list, after casting his ballot in Beirut.

As Hariri entered a public school in Beirut to vote, a woman in a wheelchair complained that polling stations were not equipped for disabled voters.

“We are human beings. It is not fair that we have to be carried like bags of potatoes,” the woman, Silvana Lakkis, said.

The prime minister promised to address the problem in the next elections.

“When we see what is happening in countries around us and Lebanon is holding democratic elections, this shows that Lebanon is fine,” Hariri said after waiting in line around 20 minutes to cast his ballot.

“Order is nice,” he quipped. Hezbollah has sent thousands of fighters to back President Bashar Assad’s forces, a move that has been criticized by many Lebanese, mainly Sunni Muslims and Christians, who see the group as dragging the country into regional conflicts.

Leading Hezbollah legislator Ali Ammar defended his group’s involvemen­t in Syria, saying it protected Lebanon from the “evil powers” of the Islamic State group and al-Qaida.

In Hezbollah stronghold­s in southern Beirut, there was a steady flow of voters Sunday. Streets were festooned with candidates’ posters and Hezbollah’s signature yellow flags.

Outside polling stations, Hezbollah supporters displayed a replica of the voting ballot on a big board and explained to voters which among the colour-coded lists is theirs, and how they can vote for it.

They wore yellow shirts with the slogan “We protect and build” written on them.

“We love the resistance,” said Amira Sidani, an 85-year-old woman, after casting her ballot.

This year’s vote is according to a new election law that is based on proportion­al representa­tion for the first time.

Voters will choose one list of allied candidates, as well as a preferred candidate from among them.

In the past, the winning list took all the seats in the electoral district.

That has cracked open the door for more outsiders to field the elections, challengin­g political titans who have long ruled the country based on a sectarian and family patronage system.

There are about 3.6 million eligible voters.

 ?? HASSAN AMMAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The deputy chief of Hezbollah, Sheik Naim Kassem, shows his ink-stained finger after casting his vote during Lebanon's parliament­ary elections.
HASSAN AMMAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The deputy chief of Hezbollah, Sheik Naim Kassem, shows his ink-stained finger after casting his vote during Lebanon's parliament­ary elections.

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