Arab News

Violence rages as Syria holds farcical poll

Clashes in north, west and east, opposition says elections distract from real reform

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DAMASCUS: Syrians voted in a parliament­ary election yesterday touted by authoritie­s as a milestone of political reform but dismissed by the opposition as a facade while people are killed every day in an anti-government uprising.

Violence persisted across the country between forces loyal to President Bashar Assad and rebels fighting to end four decades of dynastic rule by his family.

“All of this is a theater show. The candidates are businessme­n and pawns of strong people in power,” one man told Reuters near a polling station in the capital.

In the eastern province of Deir Al-zor, three dissidents were killed in a dawn raid by government troops, the Observator­y added, underlinin­g the challenge of holding a credible poll and complicati­ng the task of UN observers monitoring a cease-fire declared on April 12.

Unlike autocratic leaders in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen who were toppled by the Arab Spring, Assad has kept enough support among the military to withstand the 14-month-old revolt.

Assad dismisses the uprising as the work of foreign-backed “terrorists” and, counting on the diplomatic support of longtime ally Russia, says he will carry out his own reform program. But the ferocity of the crackdown has appalled people across the globe and many foreign government­s have urged him to step down. Since succeeding his father Hafez Assad in 2000, Assad has relied on a pliant Parliament to rubberstam­p the will of the ruling family in the country.

The assembly currently does not have a single opposition member and official media said half the seats would be reserved for “representa­tives of workers and peasants,” whose unions are controlled by Assad’s Baath Party.

Opposition figures are boycotting the vote, saying Syria’s revised constituti­on — which allowed new political parties to be set up this year — has changed nothing.

Activist Musaab Al-hamadee said people were striking in Hama — a city with a bloody history of oppostion to the Assads — and that activists were burning tires in the streets.

In Qalaat Al-madeeq, a village in Hama province, video which activists say was filmed on Monday showed the streets completely deserted and shops shuttered.

“Today is the Syrian parliament­ary poll and we say to you Bashar Assad that there are no people in Qalaat Al-madeeq voting. You’ve displaced people and killed women and children. We are on strike,” a man filming in Hama said offcamera.

Election posters, mostly of proAssad candidates, hung in central Damascus and regions where Assad still retains strong authority but there appeared to be fewer in outlying areas that form the bedrock of the revolt. State television channels aired footage from polling centers across the country, showing people ticking boxes on ballot papers and slipping them into plastic boxes. Despite heavy media coverage in recent days, there has been little discussion of candidate policies or political leanings.

In one Damascus polling station 137 people voted in the first three hours, authoritie­s told Reuters. But reporters only observed three people voting there during 40 minutes.

Reem Al-homsi, a recent university graduate, said she voted because she wants what is best for her country. “I want a normal life and I want a job,” she said.

Louay Hussein a centrist activist who heads the Movement for Building a State, said the elections were “window- dressing” and would not shift the balance of power in Syria.

“It does not matter who votes. It is a forged election -against the will of Syrians with no popular participat­ion. The Syrian Parliament has no authority over a single intelligen­ce officer. It has no power in the country at all,” he said.

Independen­t politician Qadri Jameel said he was running “because we believe we can turn the election into a starting point of a political process, and to decrease the level of violence so as to reach dialogue.”

Authoritie­s say 14 million people are eligible to vote, including expatriate­s, and 7,195 candidates are fighting for a 250-seat Parliament.

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