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| Voters flocked to polling stations in
central and eastern Lebanon on Sunday, where anti-Syrian factions squared
off against each other in the most crucial round of the country's
parliamentary elections. | BEIRUT, June 12
(Xinhua) -- Michel Aoun, who broke opposition ranks and challenged his former
allies with the help of pro-Syriangroups, scored a clean sweep against rival
Christian politicians in the third round of Lebanon's parliamentary elections on
Sunday.
The opposition alliance, which led the campaign to
force Syrian troops out of Lebanon in April, conceded that Aoun swept the board
in constituencies reserved for Christians in both the central Mount Lebanon
region and the eastern Bekaa Valley.
Druze leader Walid Jumblatt told public television
that "I acknowledge that he (Aoun) won," though Jumblatt himself was re-elected
unopposed in his fiefdom in the Chouf mountains.
He accused Aoun of serving Syrian interests, saying
"they brought Aoun back to use him as an instrument of tension among the
Christians."
Aoun had been forced by Damascus to spend 15 years in
exile and only returned home last month after withdrawal of Syrian troops from
Lebanon under pressures from both the Lebanese opposition and West-led
international community following the assassination of former Prime Minister
Rafik al-Hariri.
Voters in Mount Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley started
to cast their ballots Sunday morning to choose 58 representatives, among a total
of 262 candidates, in the 128-seat parliament.
The 58 will-be lawmakers include 23 (14 Muslims and
nine Christians) in the Bekaa's three districts and 35 (25 Christiansand 10
Muslims) in Mount Lebanon's four districts.
Being the first ballot in Lebanon after Syria
withdrew its troops after a 29-year presence, it was held on four consecutive
Sundays from May 29 until June 19 in different constituencies across the
country.
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| Lebanon's anti-Syrian Christian leader
Michel Aoun waves at a polling station in Beirut's suburbs June 12,
2005. |
The opposition party led by Saad al-Hariri, son of
the slain former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, claimed a sweeping victory by
winning the capital of Beirut's all 19 seats in the first round of the general
elections on May 29.
The pro-Syrian Shiite alliance of Amal movement and
Hezbollah won all the 23 seats in South Lebanon polls on June 5 in the second
round of the legislative elections, Interior Minister Hassan al-Sabaa announced
the official results at a pressconference.
The elections are being held under international
scrutiny with more than 100 foreign observers from the European Union and the
United Nations present at the scene.
The Lebanese legislature's 128 seats, which will be
shared equally by the Christian and Muslim communities, will serve a term of
four years. Enditem |