Anti-Syrian bloc celebrates Lebanon election win

BEIRUT,  (Reuters) – An anti-Syrian coalition defeated  Hezbollah in Lebanon’s parliamentary election yesterday in a  blow to Syria and Iran and a boost to the United States.

“Congratulations to Lebanon, congratulations to democracy,  congratulations to freedom,” the coalition’s leader Saad  al-Hariri said in a victory speech at his mansion in Beirut.

The outcome was also welcome news for Saudi Arabia and  Egypt, which back Hariri’s “March 14” alliance – the date of a  2005 rally against Syria’s military presence in Lebanon.

“We have lost the election,” conceded a senior politician  close to the bloc of Shi’ite groups Hezbollah and Amal and  Christian ally Michel Aoun.

“We accept the result as the will of the people.”
The vote will be viewed as a stinging setback to Aoun, who  held the biggest bloc of Christian MPs in the outgoing assembly  and had hoped to seal his claim to speak for the Christians.

A source in Hariri’s campaign predicted a decisive victory,  with his bloc taking at least 70 of the assembly’s 128 seats.
Perhaps 100 of the seats were virtually decided in advance,  thanks to sectarian voting patterns and political deals, with  Sunni and Shi’ite communities voting solidly on opposing sides.

The real electoral battle centred on Christian areas, where  Aoun was up against former President Amin Gemayel’s Phalange  Party, Samir Geagea’s Lebanese Forces and independents.

Lebanon’s rival camps are at odds over Hezbollah’s guerrilla  force, which outguns the Lebanese army, and ties with Syria,  which dominated Lebanon for three decades until 2005.

The likeliest outcome of the poll is another “national  unity” government, analysts say.
According to unofficial results, Prime Minister Fouad  Siniora, who has enjoyed Western and Arab support, won a  parliamentary seat in the mainly Sunni southern city of Sidon.

Siniora, 66, has headed the cabinet since the Hariri-led  coalition won the 2005 parliamentary election. He led the  government through 18 months of political conflict with  Hezbollah and its allies, but is not expected to keep his post.
Voting was relatively trouble-free across Lebanon, although  there were many reports of vote-buying before the poll, with  some Lebanese expatriates being offered free air tickets home.

The United States, which lists Hezbollah as a terrorist  group, has linked future aid to Lebanon to the shape and  policies of the next government. Hezbollah, which says it must  keep its arms to deter Israel, is part of the outgoing cabinet.
The anti-Syrian coalition has enjoyed firm backing from many  Western countries since the 2005 assassination of Hariri’s  father Rafik al-Hariri.

The coalition took power in an election following Hariri’s  killing, but struggled to govern in the face of a sometimes  violent conflict with Hezbollah and its allies.

Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah said any new government had to  be based on partnership, not on one side monopolising power.

“Whatever the results of the election, we cannot change the  standing delicate balances or repeat the experiences of the past  which led to catastrophes on Lebanon,” he told Reuters.

“Whoever wants political stability, the preservation of  national unity and the resurrection of Lebanon will find no  choice but to accept the principle of consensus.”

Hezbollah and its allies insisted on being given veto power  in a unity cabinet — a demand that caused an 18-month political  deadlock until it was granted under a Qatari-brokered deal that  followed street fighting in Beirut in May 2008.
Leading anti-Syrian politician Walid Jumblatt said he  opposed the idea of veto power for the opposition.
Asked if they should be in the government, he told Reuters:  “Yes, but I cannot decide on my own. I am part of a coalition  and it should be a unanimous decision.”

Tensions in Lebanon have mostly been kept in check since the  Qatari-mediated accord dragged the country back from the brink  of civil war. A thaw in relations between Saudi Arabia and Syria  has also helped maintain stability in recent months.
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.

Baroud said preliminary figures showed a turnout of more  than 54 percent, a high figure for Lebanon, where hundreds of  thousands of the 3.26 million eligible voters live abroad.