Lebanon Begins Election Preparations

Author: 
Selim Yassine, Agence France Presse
Publication Date: 
Tue, 2005-05-10 03:00

BEIRUT, 10 May 2005 — Lebanon began preparing yesterday for much-awaited legislative elections as cracks emerged in the anti-Syrian opposition camp, exacerbated by the return of Christian hard-liner Michel Aoun.

With pressure mounting from the United States, the United Nations and the European Union to hold free and fair elections, politicians began consultations to draw up electoral lists. “The battle will be difficult but it will be Lebanese ... with a free and democratic voice and only the Lebanese flag raised,” opposition Druze Muslim leader Walid Jumblatt said.

Syria completed the withdrawal of its troops and intelligence officers from Lebanon on April 26, under pressure from both the Lebanese opposition and international community.

Elections for the 128-seat Parliament are to be held on four consecutive Sundays starting May 29. But the return of Syria’s archfoe Aoun and the opposition’s failure to unite against the Syrian-tailored electoral law used in the 2000 polls, is threatening to bog down Lebanon’s quota-based sectarian system of politics.

Christian opposition leaders are pressing for a new law based on smaller constituencies but Jumblatt appears to favor the larger constitutional boundaries preferred by the pro-Syrian camp.

Jumblatt is backed by MPs from the party of slain former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, whose assassination on Feb. 14 galvanized demands for change and paved the way for an end to 29 years of Syrian domination.

An election expert told AFP that Jumblatt and the Hariri clan were wary of angering two key pro-Syrian groups — the Shiite movement Hezbollah and Parliament speaker Nabih Berri’s group Amal.

Hezbollah, the only Lebanese militia to still carry arms after the end of the 1975-1990 civil war, is revered in many parts of Lebanon for having forced Israel to pull out from the country in May 2000 after 22 years of occupation.

Since his triumphant return Saturday from 15 years of exile in France, Aoun has been holding court at his home in the residential suburb of Rabiyeh, patching up ties with old foes, including Hezbollah.

On Sunday he received Sitrida Geagea, the wife of jailed Christian warlord Samir Geagea who fought a bloody battle against Aoun’s forces in the dying days of the civil war, and the pair agreed to “turn a page on the past”.

His guests yesterday included Hezbollah representative Ali Ammar who said a meeting would be held soon between Gen. Aoun, the former armed forces chief, and Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the head of Hezbollah.

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