Lebanon: Expediting Parliamentary Elections Threatens to Deprive 200,000 People From Voting

 Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri holds a parliamentary session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut, Lebanon October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Taher
Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri holds a parliamentary session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut, Lebanon October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Taher
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Lebanon: Expediting Parliamentary Elections Threatens to Deprive 200,000 People From Voting

 Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri holds a parliamentary session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut, Lebanon October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Taher
Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri holds a parliamentary session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut, Lebanon October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Taher

Lebanon’s Parliament approval to advance the date of the parliamentary elections to March 27, 2022, raises some questions about the impact of the decision on the electoral process and the number of new voters.

However, the parliament’s law requires the signature of President Michel Aoun, who still opposes the new amendments.

In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, MP Salim Aoun said that the president was studying the appropriate step to be taken in this regard, noting that if he signed the law, the parliamentary bloc of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) would challenge it.

The CEO of Statistics Lebanon, Rabih Haber, told Asharq Al-Awsat that bringing the elections date forward “greatly affects the electoral process, because the electoral machines will not be able to complete their work.”

He asserted that advancing the date of the elections would deprive a large segment of people, who are about to reach 21 years-old, from the right to vote.

This is why the head of the FPM, former Minister Gebran Bassil, strongly opposed the amendment, according to Haber.

“Around 200,000 people will be deprived of voting, and this number is very big,” Haber said, adding that official figures and data would not be released before the voters’ lists are completed.

However, Mohammad Shamseddine, researcher at Information International, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the legal period for holding the elections falls within the sixty days preceding the end of Parliament’s term on May 21.

“Therefore, we cannot talk here about the elections being advanced; it’s an amendment to the deadlines,” he explained.

Shamseddine added: “There will be no real impact on the ground if the date of the elections is brought forward. This will not affect the results of the elections.”

A statistical study of the numbers of voters conducted by Statistics Lebanon in 2018 showed that 75.31 percent of new voters (493,220 people) were Muslims, compared to 24.68 percent (161,660) of Christians.

According to Statistics Lebanon, Muslim voters constitute the majority in the districts of the governorates of the South, Nabatiyeh, Bekaa, and Akkar, while the districts are divided in the governorates of Mount Lebanon, North and Beirut. Muslim voters form the majority in Beirut’s second electoral district, the North’s second district, the Baabda District and the Chouf-Aley constituency, while Christian voters form a majority in Beirut’s first district and the North’s first district, as well as in the constituencies of Metn and Kessrouan-Jbeil.

Haber asserted that any change of the date would have an impact on the elections. He added that the electoral parties of the civil movement were still preparing their lists. “The political forces are also not ready,” he underlined.



4 UN Peacekeepers Wounded in Southern Lebanon

 An UN soldier stands on the top of a tower at a base of the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) at the Israeli-Lebanese border as seen from northern Israel, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (AP)
An UN soldier stands on the top of a tower at a base of the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) at the Israeli-Lebanese border as seen from northern Israel, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (AP)
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4 UN Peacekeepers Wounded in Southern Lebanon

 An UN soldier stands on the top of a tower at a base of the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) at the Israeli-Lebanese border as seen from northern Israel, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (AP)
An UN soldier stands on the top of a tower at a base of the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) at the Israeli-Lebanese border as seen from northern Israel, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. (AP)

Four United Nations peacekeepers were wounded in southern Lebanon on Tuesday when a rocket struck a base, while another peacekeeping base was damaged by rocket fire and a patrol was shot at.

In a statement, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said “a rocket, likely fired by non-state actors within Lebanon,” struck the base of the Ghana's mission in the east of Ramyah village, injuring four peacekeepers, three of whom required hospitalization.

In the southern village of Chamaa, where heavy fighting between Hezbollah and the Israeli army has been taking place, five rockets damaged UNIFIL’s Sector West Headquarters. The UN force said this was the second attack on the base in a week, adding that no injuries were reported.

In another attack, an armed person “directly fired” at a UNIFIL patrol near Khirbat Silim, but there were no injuries, the statement said.

UNIFIL added that it launched investigations into each of the violent episodes and informed the Lebanese army about them.

“UNIFIL once again reminds all actors involved in the ongoing hostilities to respect the inviolability of United Nations peacekeepers and premises,” the statement said.

Italy said eight rockets struck the headquarters of its UN peacekeeping contingent in southern Lebanon. No one was injured.

According to the Italian defense ministry, the eight 107-millimenter rockets hit outdoor areas and a warehouse at the base in Chamaa, where no soldiers were present. Five soldiers were being kept under observation, the statement said.

Italy said it was investigating from where the rockets originated, and who was responsible.

It was the second time in a week that Italy has complained about rockets or shells hitting its peacekeepers' base.

Last week, Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani spoke with his Israeli counterpart to demand an investigation after an artillery shell hit the gym on the base. No one was injured in that episode and the shell did not detonate.

Also on Tuesday, the Israeli military said another UN peacekeeper's position was hit by a Hezbollah rocket, causing damage and “several injuries.”

The army said it had received a report from UNIFIL that a post in the area of Ramyeh in southern Lebanon was hit.

The military said it conducted a review and determined the location was hit by a Hezbollah rocket fired in a barrage aimed at Israel. There was no immediate comment from UNIFIL on the episode.