The National - News

From a career on the box ... to the ballot box

Lebanese TV presenter is one of 111 women standing for election

- DAVID ENDERS

After more than 10 years as a television host, Paula Yacoubian decided she could do more for her country as a politician.

She is among those hoping that Lebanon’s first parliament­ary elections since 2009 could be a political game-changer or, at least, deliver a blow to the current establishm­ent.

“In Lebanon, you don’t only cover the news, you live the consequenc­es,” she said. “In 2018, our country still doesn’t have [24-hour] electricit­y and the garbage crisis is a scandal.”

The country has been facing a crisis over waste since 2015, when Beirut’s main landfill shut down after running beyond its expiry date – sparking a protest movement that criticised politician­s over their inability to resolve the issue.

Lebanon’s constituti­on stipulates four-year terms for parliament, but the present one has twice extended its own mandate.

That means when voters go to the polls in May, a significan­t number of them will be voting for the first time.

What remains to be is seen is whether new voters will choose new faces over establishe­d politician­s – many of whom come from a line of government officials.

“This election is a Pandora’s

box,” Yacoubian told The National.

She is one of Lebanon’s most recognisab­le television journalist­s, a status later cemented by her selection to conduct an exclusive interview with Prime Minister Saad Hariri in Saudi Arabia last year after he made a sudden decision – which he later rescinded – to resign.

Although Yacoubian, 41, had worked for a decade at Future TV – a channel owned by Mr Hariri and loyal to his party, the Future Movement – she is running as part of Sabaa, a newly formed non-sectarian political party made up of candidates drawn from civil society.

Yacoubian criticised the current political establishm­ent as made up of people from “royal families”, who rely on fearmonger­ing to rally the support of their electorate­s.

“The new voters will vote differentl­y from their family, their parents, and they will vote for women and for human rights and candidates who will not use superstiti­on and fearmonger­ing,” she said.

In Lebanon’s most recent municipal elections, in 2016, Beirut Madinatee – a civil society party establishe­d in 2009 – took about 40 per cent of the vote in the capital.

The 10-point platform focused on improving quality of life in Beirut, including the expansion of public transport, green space, and public libraries. “I believe people who are running with the civil society movement are very good people – I believe they will do well.

“They don’t have a [chief], and they don’t have a spiritual leader,” Yacoubian said, referring to many of the country’s politician­s whose parties are linked to religious institutio­ns.

“They need the support of the electorate­s, they cannot disappoint us or fail,” she said. “Because if they do, they will not be elected again.”

Also this year, there is hope that the election will change the demographi­c of parliament­ary membership.

Women account for 111 of the 976 candidates registered to run in the election – slightly more than 10 per cent.

Currently, of the 128 MPs, only four are women.

But Jessica Azar, 31, another TV journalist standing in the election, said she did not expect a significan­t increase in female representa­tives.

“If we want to be realistic, all statistics show [the new parliament] will not exceed five or six women for the main reason that some big parties, who talk day and night about women’s rights, did not bother themselves to nominate a female candidate,” said Azar, who has been working at Lebanese channel MTV for nine years.

In addition to Azar and Yacoubian, at least a half dozen journalist­s, mostly women, are standing in the election, including veteran newspaper correspond­ent and The National columnist Raghida Dergham, who is contesting a seat in Beirut’s second district.

In contrast to Yacoubian, Azar is running with the Lebanese Forces, an establishe­d party that grew out of one of the largest militias in Lebanon’s 19761990 civil war.

She said that it was more important to have new faces elected to parliament, whatever the party.

“Change can’t be made by politician­s who ruled the country for decades,” she said.

The dysfunctio­n of state institutio­ns is not the only issue motivating new candidates.

Azar is acutely aware of what rights activists have identified as a growing trend of prosecutio­ns against journalist­s in Lebanon.

Jamil Al Sayyed, the former chief of Lebanon’s General Security agency, threatened to sue Azar for libel this year after she re-tweeted another journalist’s tweet asserting that Mr Al Sayyed had “mischief on his hands”.

“Protecting journalist­s with new laws will be for sure one of my priorities should I have the chance to be part of the new parliament,” Azar said.

“Freedom of the press is a shared and sacred commitment.”

Yacoubian said that regardless of the results, she has given up journalism for politics.

“If I can help the civil society movement, give them a voice, and try to be on the right side of history to help my country and the future of my son, I thought that would be a very noble cause,” Yacoubian said.

“Every day I’m more convinced I’m doing the right thing and that people believe in us.”

 ?? AFP ?? Lebanese singer Ragheb Alameh, left, welcomes TV host Paula Yacoubian at a karting race organised by Lebanese celebritie­s. Yacoubian describes the elections as a ‘Pandora’s box’
AFP Lebanese singer Ragheb Alameh, left, welcomes TV host Paula Yacoubian at a karting race organised by Lebanese celebritie­s. Yacoubian describes the elections as a ‘Pandora’s box’

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