World

Lebanon votes in first election since crisis

Power likely to remain with incumbents as nation continues economic downturn

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 15 May 2022 6:30PM

Lebanon votes in first election since crisis
Delegates of the Shia Amal movement gather outside a polling station in Lebanon’s capital Beirut, today during the parliamentary election. Many voters are indifferent to the elections as the country battles a massive economic crisis. – AFP pic, May 15, 2022

BEIRUT – Lebanon voted today in its first election since multiple crises dragged it to the brink of failed statehood, a major test for new opposition groups bent on removing the ruling elite.

Observers have warned not to expect any seismic shift, with every lever of power firmly in the hands of traditional sectarian parties and an electoral system rigged in their favour.

After an underwhelming campaign stifled by the nation’s all-consuming economic turmoil, 3.9 million Lebanese were eligible to vote when polling stations opened at 7am (12pm Malaysia time).

The army deployed across the country to secure an election Lebanon’s donors have stressed was a prerequisite for financial aid crucial to rescuing the country from bankruptcy.

A new generation of independent candidates and parties are hoping to kindle the change that an unprecedented anti-corruption uprising in 2019 failed to deliver.

“I am with change because we tried this current political class before and now is the time to bring in new faces,” Nayla, a 28-year-old who only gave her first name, said after casting her vote in Beirut.

Independents can hope for more than the lone seat they clinched in 2018 but most of Parliament’s 128 seats will remain in the clutches of the very political class that is blamed for the country’s woes.

The outgoing chamber was dominated by the Iran-backed Shia movement Hezbollah and its two main allies: the Shia Amal party of speaker Nabih Berri and the Christian Free Patriotic Movement of President Michel Aoun.

“It seems almost impossible to imagine Lebanon voting for more of the same – and yet that appears to be the likeliest outcome,” said Sam Heller, an analyst with the Century Foundation.

Since the last election, the country was mutilated by an August 2020 blast at the Beirut port that went down as one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history and deepened one of the most spectacular economic downturns of our time.

Corruption

The Lebanese pound has lost 95% of its value, people’s savings are blocked in banks, minimum wage would not buy a tank of petrol and mains electricity comes on only two hours a day.

More than 80% of the population is now considered poor by the United Nations, with the most desperate increasingly attempting perilous boat crossings to flee to Europe.

Once described as the Switzerland of the Middle East, Lebanon ranked second-to-last behind Afghanistan in the latest World Happiness Index released in March.

Numbed by the daily hardships of the economic crisis, many registered voters have seemed indifferent to an election that they doubted would even be held until a few days ago.

Despite international pressure to reform Lebanese politics, the corruption that sank the country is still rife, including in the electoral process.

The crisis has only widened the gap in purchasing power between the politicians who buy votes and the electorate that sells them.

At one candidate’s rally in the northern city of Tripoli, some well-wishers disappointed by the lack of cash handouts made off with the plastic chairs.

Low hopes

While today’s election might not topple their reviled leadership, some Lebanese see the vote as an important test for the principles that arose during the October 2019 uprising.

For Marianne Vodolian, the cataclysmic August 2020 explosion that disfigured Beirut and killed more than 200 people makes voting an even more sacred duty.

“We are against the regime that ruled us for 30 years, robbed us and blew us up,” said the 32-year-old, a spokesman for the families of blast victims.

Opposition parties, many of which emanated from the now-defunct protest movement supporting secular and democratic change, have struggled to mount a united challenge but could secure a stronger voice in Parliament nonetheless.

“The elections are an opportunity to change the system and hold it accountable in a way that makes this country liveable,” Vodolian said.

Top political barons have stalled an investigation into the explosion – two of the main suspects are even running for a seat – and legal proceedings against the central bank governor over financial crimes are equally floundering.

One of the most notable changes in the electoral landscape is the absence of former prime minister Saad Hariri, which leaves parts of the Sunni vote up for grabs by new players. – AFP, May 15, 2022

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