|
 Saad (R) and Nazek (L)
Hariri, the son and the widow of former slain Lebanese premier Rafiq
Hariri, celebrate. The bloc of Saad Hariri won all 19 seats in the capital
in Sunday's first stage of the parliamentary elections. (AFP
Photo) | BEIRUT, May 30
(Xinhuanet) -- The bloc of Saad Hariri, son of Lebanon's slain Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri, won all 19 seats in the capital in Sunday's first stage of the
parliamentary elections,Interior Minister Hassan al-Sabaa announced Monday.
Saad Hariri, a Sunni Muslim, won 39,500 of 42,000
votes cast in his constituency, the highest number in any of the 10 contested
seats in the mainly Sunni Lebanese capital.
Saad's bloc has already secured nine seats by
default.
The interior minister also said only 28 percent of
400,000 eligible voters turned out.
The voting in Beirut began at 7 a.m. (0400 GMT) and
closed at 6 p.m. (1500 GMT).
The 19 seats will be allocated to six Sunni Muslims,
three Armenian Orthodox, two Greek Orthodox, two Shiite Muslims, one Druze, one
Maronite Catholic, one Armenian Catholic, one Greek Catholic, one Protestant and
one for minorities.
Being the first ballot in Lebanon after Syria
withdrew its troops after a 29-year presence, it will be held on four
consecutive Sundays until June 19 in different constituencies across the
country.
Syria completed all troops withdrawal from its tiny
neighbour on April 26 under intense international pressure and mass Lebanese
protests following the assassination of Rafik Hariri on Feb. 14.
The death of Hariri, a Sunni and the major architect
of Lebanon's post-civil war reconstruction, also plunged Lebanon into a
political crisis and forced the resignation of its pro-Syrian government.
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