Lebanon to vote in first election since financial meltdown
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[May 13, 2022] BEIRUT
(Reuters) - Lebanese vote on Sunday in the first election since their
country's economic collapse, a test of whether Iran-backed Hezbollah and
its allies can preserve their parliamentary majority amidst soaring
poverty and anger at ruling parties.
Expectations are however low for a big shake-up of Lebanon's sectarian
politics and government, despite the severity of a crisis which the
World Bank says was orchestrated by the ruling class, and fury over the
devastating Beirut port blast of 2020.
The meltdown marks Lebanon's most destabilising crisis since the 1975-90
civil war. It has seen the currency sink by more than 90%, left about
three quarters of the population in poverty and frozen savers out of
deposits in paralysed banks.
Analysts believe reform-minded candidates could win some seats this
time, but reformers have long struggled to penetrate a sectarian system
that divides parliament's seats among 11 religious groups and is skewed
in favour of established parties.
The 2018 vote saw heavily armed Shi'ite movement Hezbollah and its
allies - including President Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement
(FPM), a Christian party - win 71 out of parliament's 128 seats.
Those results pulled Lebanon deeper into the orbit of Shi'ite Muslim-led
Iran, marking a blow to the influence of Sunni Muslim-led Saudi Arabia.
Hezbollah has said it expects few changes from the make-up of the
current parliament, though its opponents - including the Saudi-aligned
Lebanese Forces, another Christian group - say they are hoping to scoop
up seats from the FPM. [L5N2VX2W2]
Adding a note of uncertainty, a boycott by Sunni leader Saad al-Hariri
has left a Sunni vacuum which both Hezbollah allies and opponents are
seeking to fill. Riyadh, Hariri's regional backer for years before their
ties soured, has not declared support for a new Sunni leader ahead of
the vote.
Raising the stakes, the parliament is due to elect a new president to
replace Aoun, whose term ends on Oct. 31.
Whatever the outcome, analysts say Lebanon could face a period of
paralysis that could further delay reforms needed to address the crisis,
as factions barter over portfolios in a new power-sharing cabinet - a
process that can take months.
The outgoing government clinched a draft agreement with the IMF in April
- conditional on long-delayed reforms.
Prime Minister Najib Mikati, a tycoon serving his third stint as
premier, could be named to form the new government, sources from four
factions told Reuters. Mikati told Arabic broadcaster Alhurra on
Wednesday he was ready to return as premier if he was certain of a quick
cabinet formation.
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Vehicles drive past billboards depicting Lebanon's Hezbollah leader
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, ahead of parliamentary election, in Beirut,
Lebanon May 13, 2022. REUTERS/Aziz Taher
Nabil Bou Monsef, deputy editor-in-chief of Annahar
newspaper, said he expected political paralysis after the vote, for
which he said opposition candidates had failed to create a single
front to compete against established parties.
"This political class as a whole has rebounded strongly because
opposition forces collapsed - and didn't know how to get their
affairs in order."
MORE POLARISATION
Following months of uncertainty over whether the election would go
ahead, polls will open at 7:00 a.m. (0400 GMT) across 15 electoral
districts. Nationals over the age of 21 vote in their ancestral
towns and villages, sometimes far from home.
Turnout was 60% among expatriates who voted early, with many saying
they want change.
Reform-minded candidates have focused on accountability for the
economic crisis, ranked by the World Bank as one of the top three
declines since the Industrial Revolution, and for the 2020 chemical
explosion at Beirut's port, which killed more than 215 people and
shattered swathes of the city.
The disaster is seen as a symbol of corrupt governance for which no
top official has been held to account.
Yet as the election drew close, another divisive issue took
centre-stage: Hezbollah's arms.
Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, whose organisation is
designated as a terrorist group by Western governments including the
United States, has said a vote for his party would help "defend
Lebanon".
Former prime minister Fouad Siniora, a fierce Hezbollah critic who
is backing like-minded Sunnis in the election, has sought to counter
a Sunni boycott, calling on voters to "preserve Lebanon's Arabness",
a push against Iranian sway.
"For me, the most important trend is more polarised politics after
the elections, along pro-Hezbollah and anti-Hezbollah lines," said
Mohanad Hage Ali of the Carnegie Middle East Center.
(Reporting by Maya Gebeily, Laila Bassam and Timour Azhari; Editing
by Tom Perry and Andrew Heavens)
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