The Jerusalem Post

Polls in two Arab towns temporaril­y closed over illegal filming

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

A polling station in Umm el-fahm was closed on Tuesday morning after an election observer attempted to illegally film the goings-on.

The observer was replaced and then the ballot was re-opened, police reported.

The Joint List provided a video of the observer being escorted from the polling station. He was likely from United Torah Judaism (UTJ), and dressed in the garb of a non-hassidic “Litvak” haredi.

Later on Tuesday, police temporaril­y closed three polling stations in Yarka, in response to a report of attempts to vote using several envelopes at a time.

The incidents followed the Likud campaign in the run-up to the election that put an emphasis on voter fraud allegation­s. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that there has been an attempt to “steal the election.”

The Likud’s voter fraud prevention efforts focused exclusivel­y on Arab areas, and included a failed attempt to pass a law allowing party appointed election observers to bring cameras into polling stations, but not voting booths. In addition, a group of settler leaders raised funds to send people to stand outside polling stations in Arab towns, saying they would protect observers.

The police also received a complaint of a 40-year-old man trying to vote under someone else’s name in Kafr Kassem. The man was stopped for questionin­g.

In addition, police detained a 17-year-old for questionin­g after he entered a polling station in Jerusalem intending to vote with a fake ID.

Likud reported to police that a Blue and White activist beat up one of their activists in Ramat Gan.

Police arrested a suspect who allegedly threw a firecracke­r at a polling station in Abu Ghosh.

Meanwhile, various parties began complainin­g of irregulari­ties at polling stations in the first hours of voting.

According to Yamina, voting slips for their party were replaced with slips for the New Right from April at a polling station in Hadera. The New Right is one of three parties running in the Yamina bloc, but it ran alone earlier this year.

Similarly, Labor-Gesher reported finding slips in Beersheba that said Labor led by Avi Gabbay, as the party was called in the last election.

Yisrael Beytenu said there was fraud at two polling stations in Ashdod. In one, its voting slips were covered, and in another, voters were told not to seal their envelopes shut. Votes in unsealed envelopes still count, though it makes them more susceptibl­e to sabotage.

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