Monday, June 08, 2009

Hizbullah says lost Lebanon election

Anti-Syrian coalition declaring victory as initial polling figures indicate it has won parliament elections. Hizbullah official acknowledges loss, says Shi'ite party will 'accept the result as the will of the people'

Roee Nahmias
Israel News
YNET News

Hizbullah and its allies in Lebanon's pro-Syria alliance lost a parliamentary election on Sunday pitting them against a US-backed coalition, a senior politician close to the alliance said. The source expected the anti-Syrian coalition, led by Sunni politician Saad al-Hariri, to win at least 70 seats in the 128-seat parliament. "We'll go back to the way we were," the source said.

Meanwhile Samir Jaja, a senior anti-Syrian politician, claimed that his party had won the vote. "The results are in favor of March 14 (the anti-Syrian coalition). The gap may not be huge but March 14 will remain the majority," he told the Lebanese LBC.



As the vote neared an end Sunday evening, both sides were voicing claims of corruption and fraud having to do with the election process. Hizbullah was accused of defrauding the vote, while the anti-Syrian camp was said to have bribed voters and used thousands of fake identification cards in order to rack up votes.


Record voter turnout

Earlier the Interior Ministry said voter turnout during the elections had reached 46 percent before polling stations closed at 7 pm, exceeding the 45 percent total recorded in the 2005 election.



That is a high percentage for Lebanon, where hundreds of thousands of the 3.26 million eligible voters live abroad.



Security was tight, with 50,000 troops and police deployed across Lebanon, especially in the most contested districts.


Security sources said one person was wounded by gunfire in the northern city of Tripoli and there were brawls between rival supporters elsewhere, but no reports of serious fighting.



"Democracy is a blessing we must preserve, a blessing that distinguishes Lebanon in the Middle East," said President Michel Suleiman after voting in his home town of Amchit, north of Beirut. He urged Lebanese to vote "calmly and with joy."



Reuters contributed to this report

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