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Lebanons election and Washington-style democracy
By Chris Talbot
2 June 2005
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It is barely two months since President George W. Bush proclaimed
that the Lebanese people have the right to determine their
future, free from domination by a foreign power. He was
extolling the so-called Cedar revolutionthe
protests in Beiruts Martyrs Square against Syrian occupation
that followed the assassination of former prime minister Rafik
Hariri. Last week, speaking at the International Republican Institute
in Washington, Bush called for the new leaders of Lebanon to build
a lasting democracy after the elections, and again insisted
that the polls must go forward with no outside influence.
Whilst Syria has since removed its troops and intelligence
officers from Lebanese soil, there has been little questioning
in the Western media of what happened to the much trumpeted democracy
and freedom that Washington claimed to have revived
in Lebanon and intends to spread throughout the Middle East. The
protest movement has been disbanded and the expectations among
the predominantly student demonstrators that a brighter future
would begin without Syrian occupation have given way to disenchantment,
while politics have turned into a sectarian power struggle that
threatens a return to civil war. Moreover, as the hundreds of
thousands of pro-Hezbollah demonstrators in Beirut on March 8
foresaw, the slogans against Syrian outside influence have been
used to entrench that of the United States.
The first round of the Lebanese elections saw a mere 28 percent
turn out, smaller than the turnout in 2000 under Syrian control.
All 19 seats in Beirut went to the Martyr Rafik Hariri List led
by Saad Hariri, Rafiks son, with nine of the candidates
unopposed.
Whilst the May 29 part of the election was in the capital onlythe
rest of the country votes over the next three Sundays in stages,
covering the south, Mount Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, and the
northern regionsmost of these seats are also expected to
be taken by candidates who have already been chosen in horse-trading
among Lebanons political elite. Hariri has formed an anti-Syrian
opposition alliance with Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, the Christian
Qornet Shehwan, and the right-wing Christian Lebanese Forces that
is likely to win a majority of the 128 parliamentary seats.
It is expected that the only constituencies where seats will
be seriously contested will be those in mainly Christian regions
in the north. The Free Patriotic Movement led by former army commander
General Michel Aoun will organise its own list, campaigning for
votes from Christians who feel that their traditional dominance
of Lebanese politics has been undermined by the Hariri-Jumblatt
list.
Aoun returned last month from exile in Paris, where he fled
after the defeat of his attempt to lead the rump of the Lebanese
army against the Syrian forces in 1990. His populist-style of
political leadershiphis opponents call him NapolAounapparently
caused his negotiations to set up a joint list with Hariri and
Jumblatt, as well as with the Shia Muslim organisations of Amal
and Hezbollah in the south, to break down.
The current electoral system, the same as that in the 2000
elections, is structured on the basis of 18 recognised religious
sects, with the dominant sect in each multi-seat constituency
choosing not only its own candidate, but also the minorities
representatives. Discussion of the candidates policies is
virtually nonexistent, with voting for lists following sectarian
lines. In line with the pattern set by the French colonialists,
Christians remain disproportionately represented in parliament
at the expense of the Shiites, who constitute the largest group.
In the past, district boundaries were drawn up and manipulated
under the supervision of Syrian intelligence forces to favour
the election of pro-Syrian candidates.
The key players in the current elections are no longer pro-Syrian,
but they have been able to manipulate the system to their advantage.
The Lebanon Star published a May 21 comment, Have
Outside Powers Manipulated Lebanons Christians? It
explained that the 2000 voting system was insisted on by the US,
backed by France and Saudi Arabia. After the deeply divided Lebanese
political elite were unable to agree on an alternative to the
present voting system, Washington demanded that the poll go ahead
regardless. Elections were to be called within the USs May
timetable as a part of the overall Middle East democracy
campaign.
The Star noted: Even inside the opposition many
politicians have spoken of replacing one outside interference
with another. Consequently, they say the election law that served
one power could easily serve its successor under the same conditions
that allow powerful coalitions to manipulate or buy
electoral tickets.
Reference to manipulation of the Christians means
that the Sunni and Druze elites of Hariri and Jumblatt have been
able to incorporate Christians into their voting lists to win
seats under the 2000 election law, whereas the Christian elite
have been unable to do the same. The Christian Maronite patriarch,
Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir, bitterly complained to the US that under
the present system, Christians will be able to directly elect
only 14 members of parliament, with a further 50 of the traditional
total of 64 Christian seats elected through the list system in
Muslim-dominated voting districts.
Sfeir attacked the decision to go ahead with the elections
and, in turn, was accused by unidentified sources
in the Bush administration of whipping up sectarian sentiments.
In March, Sfeir visited Washington and held talks with Bush, advising
the US on how to maintain the delicate sectarian balance in a
Lebanon no longer dominated by Syria.
It seems that Sfeir was sidelined in the decision to go ahead
with the elections. According to the Star (May 19), there
was an under-the-table agreement between Jumblatt, Saad
Hariri, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri [the leader of Amal], and
Hezbollah, who saw the legislation as an opportunity to protect
or expand their power base. Sfeir was kept in the
dark on the deal, or key aspects of it.
The Star questions whether the Hariri-Jumblatt ticket,
with Christians marginalized, can bring about the
changes desired by the US. They claim that US Ambassador Jeffrey
Feltman attempted but failed to mend the rift between Aoun
and Jumblatt. But it is highly probable that whatever section
of the Lebanese opposition elite is in government, having removed
Syria, Washington will now demand the disarmament of Hezbollah,
which it still regards as a terrorist organisation.
Part of the US agenda will be to strengthen the Lebanese armed
forces. Current Prime Minister Mikati has already visited Arab
countries to ask for support in this task. Mikati has also held
talks with World Bank Officials to discuss the free market reforms
that the international banks are demanding of the Lebanese economy,
which opposition political leaders are also willing to implement.
Among the majority of the population there is widespread opposition
to the present voting system, and a gaping chasm exists between
the interests of working people from all religious backgrounds
and the wealthy ruling circles. Al Safir newspaper carried
out a poll in which more than three quarters of people questioned
said they supported a democratic secular system, and more than
half wanted political representation based on secular parties
rather than religious sects.
Meanwhile, Michel Aoun is stirring up right-wing Christian
political resentment against the Hariri-Jumblatt list in advance
of the next round of the elections. With his characteristic demagogy,
he denounced the opposition leaders as responsible for 15
years of corruption and misleading the country. They had
only recently adopted an anti-Syrian stance, were betraying their
popular base, and were looking out for their own interests.
Calling himself the real opposition to Syria, he accused
the Hariri-Jumblatt ticket of exploiting an emotional state
that occurred after the martyrdom of Premier Hariri to blackmail
people into voting for them.
In his most recent pronouncements, Aoun has also called for
a strengthening of the army and the liberation of
institutions from the grip of the security regime,
by which he apparently means not only Syria, but the bulk of the
present political establishment that had worked under Syrian intelligence.
Echoing the demands of the pro-Israel Christian right, he also
called for more efficient foreign diplomacy to remove
the dangers of settling Palestinians in Lebanon.
Amongst the worst atrocities committed during the civil war
were the massacres of thousands of Palestinian refugees at Tel
al-Zaatar in 1976 and at Sabra and Shatilla in 1982, by the Christian
Phalangist militia with the support of Israel. Aoun is now calling
for the removal of the 200,000 or more Palestinian refugees still
forced to live, disenfranchised and poverty-stricken, in camps
in Lebanon.
See Also:
US increases pressure on Lebanon
amid growing instability
[30 March 2005]
As Bush tells Lebanese we
are with youMassive rally in Beirut rejects US intervention
[10 March 2005]
The assassination of Rafiq
Hariri: who benefited?
[17 February 2005]
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