Lebanese throng to polls in watershed elections
June 8, 2009 - 0:0
BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanese crowded peacefully to the polls on Sunday a watershed parliamentary election that pits the Islamic resistance movement Hezbollah and its allies against a bloc that has U.S. and Saudi support.
With four hours to go before polls were due to close at 7 p.m. (12:00 p.m. EDT), Interior Minister Ziyad Baroud said turnout had already reached 40 percent, suggesting it would exceed the 45 percent total recorded in the 2005 election.However there are credible reports of a very high turnout in the Southern parts of the country, the stronghold of Hezbollah and its allies.
That would be a high percentage for Lebanon, where hundreds of thousands of the 3.26 million eligible voters live abroad.
Long queues spilled onto streets near some polling centers in Beirut. Some voters said they had been waiting for more than two hours to cast their ballot in what was widely expected to be a close contest between evenly balanced camps.
Even if Hezbollah and its allies reverse their opponent's slim parliamentary majority, the likeliest outcome of the poll is another “national unity” government -- perhaps with a small group of independents holding the balance, analysts say.
Security was tight, with 50,000 troops and police deployed across Lebanon, especially in the most contested districts.
“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.”
Christians, nearly 40 percent of Lebanon's eligible voters, are divided between the two main political blocs and their votes are expected to decide the election.