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Lebanon's anti-Syrian alliance has swept the
board in the first round of general elections,
officials say.
Amidst a low turnout, the coalition headed by the son of murdered
former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri took all 19
seats in the capital
Beirut.
Pro-Syrian Shia groups are tipped to fare better in next Sunday's
second round of voting in the south.
But the country-wide result is expected to see a big parliamentary
majority for
Syria's
opponents.
Voter apathy
Announcing the official results, the interior minister confirmed
that the list headed by Saad Hariri had easily
captured all 10 of the contested
Beirut seats.
The other nine seats in the capital had already been won by default
before the voting even began.
Mr Hariri himself won the highest personal score of votes.
But this was not the ringing endorsement that the anti-Syrian
alliance had been looking for.
The turnout, at about 27%, was lower than in the last elections -
when Syrian troops were still around and
Syrian influence was still strong.
Voter apathy was clearly a factor, with many people feeling that the
results had been stitched up in advance.
The same factors also prompted boycott calls by former General
Michel Aoun, who fought the Syrians in the
late 1980s, and by one of the big Armenian
parties.
But the minister said the elections had passed off completely
peacefully, except for one small fracas
between supporters of rival parties.
That is one of the major achievements of this process - left to
their own devices following the Syrian troop
withdrawal last month, the Lebanese have
steered away from violence as a way of
settling their differences.
The minister said he hoped the mentality of war was finished for
good.
But the low turnout carried a clear message of public
dissatisfaction with a highly sectarian
political system which allows the clan and
factional leaders to strike deals and
alliances which leave voters with few real
choices.
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By Jim Muir
BBC News, Beirut
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