Bangkok Post

Syrians vote for new parliament

Assad’s Baath party, allies set to dominate

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DAMASCUS: Syrians voted yesterday to elect a new parliament as the Damascus government grapples with internatio­nal sanctions and a crumbling economy after retaking large parts of the war-torn country.

More than 7,400 polling stations opened across government-held parts of Syria, including for the first time in former opposition stronghold­s, the electoral commission said.

President Bashar al-Assad’s Baath party and its allies are expected to take most of parliament’s 250 seats in the third such polls to be held since the war started nine years ago.

In Damascus, dozens of voters — some in face masks to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s — headed to polling stations to cast their ballots, an AFP correspond­ent said.

Inside one centre, several posted their choice in a sealed envelope into a plastic ballot box, as organisers in face coverings and gloves looked on.

Nearby, volunteers carried the programmes and pictures of their candidates of choice, and tried to draw in passersby to come in a vote.

Hana Sukriye, 29, an employee at the finance ministry, said she was voting for the first time in her life.

“My vote alone won’t make a difference, but if we all come together to choose worthy candidates, there will be an impact and change,” she said.

“Everybody needs to choose now so that they can later hold accountabl­e and object to the performanc­e of candidates who get elected” if necessary.

As the eve of the polls approached, one person was killed and another wounded in a blast in Damascus, state news agency SANA said, but the cause of the explosion was not immediatel­y clear.

Several lists were allowed to run across the country but any real opposition is absent, and the ruling Baath party is expected to retain its hegemony.

Portraits of the 1,658 contenders, some of whom include prominent businessme­n, have been displayed across the capital for weeks.

The elections, which have been twice postponed since April due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, come at a time when most Syrians are worried about the soaring cost of living.

Many candidates are running on programmes pledging to tackle inflation and improve infrastruc­ture ravaged by the conflict.

“Lawmakers are going to have to make exceptiona­l efforts to improve services,” said Umaya, a 31-yearold woman who works in a dentist’s practice.

Millions of Syrians living abroad, after fleeing a war that has killed more than 380,000 people, are not eligible to vote.

But for the first time, voting will take place in territory retaken by the government, including in the Eastern Ghouta region outside Damascus and in the south of Idlib province in the country’s northwest.

After a string of military victories backed by key ally Russia, the government is back in control of around 70% of the country, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights war monitor says.

In the last polls in 2016, turnout stood at 57%.

This year’s vote comes as Damascus continues to struggle to redress an economy battered by nine years of war, Western sanctions and the fallout of a financial crisis in neighbouri­ng Lebanon.

Food prices in Syria have shot up by more than 200% in the past year and now stand at 20 times their pre-war levels, the World Food Programme says.

In a country where more than 80% of people already live in poverty, the UN food agency has warned that Syrians are now facing an “unpreceden­ted hunger crisis”.

The elections also come as Mr Assad marked his second decade in power earlier this month, and weeks after the United States imposed new sanctions on Syria including on the president’s wife.

The next presidenti­al polls are expected in 2021, and candidates will need the written approval of at least 35 members of parliament.

Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem last month said Assad would remain in power “as long as the Syrian want him to stay”.

Syria has officially recorded 496 cases of the novel coronaviru­s, including 25 deaths in government-held areas.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman dips her finger in ink after casting her ballot at a voting station in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, Syria, yesterday.
AFP A woman dips her finger in ink after casting her ballot at a voting station in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, Syria, yesterday.

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