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Opposition Wins Metn By-Election By Narrow Margin, Gemayel Reaps Vas

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  • Opposition Wins Metn By-Election By Narrow Margin, Gemayel Reaps Vas

    OPPOSITION WINS METN BY-ELECTION BY NARROW MARGIN, GEMAYEL REAPS VAST MARONITE VOTES

    http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/NewsDesk. nsf/getstory?openform&94D4DAD5721DD32FC225732F 001D543C
    06 Aug 07, 07:21
    Beirut

    Camille Khoury, the candidate backed by opposition leader Gen. Michel
    Aoun beat by a narrow margin former President Amin Gemayel in the
    crucial Metn by-election, but the anti-Syrian runner reaped a vast
    majority of Maronite votes.

    Gemayel, a prominent leader of the pro-government ruling majority,
    had been vying to replace his son Pierre Gemayel who was killed last
    November in one of a series of attacks blamed by the majority on
    Syria. Damascus has rejected the accusations.

    Khoury won 39,534 votes, against 39,116 votes for Gemayel, whose
    representative has lodged a "complaint on the results," Interior
    Minister Hasan Sabah said in a press conference before dawn Monday. He
    gave no other details.

    Both sides declared they had won a few hours after the polls closed
    Sunday.

    The daily An Nahar on Monday said the Armenian community in Lebanon
    played a key role in the Metn by-election victory.

    It said that while Khoury obtained 8,400 Armenian votes, Gemayel got
    only 1,600.

    Sabeh earlier told reporters that the ruling majority candidate,
    Mohammed al-Amin Itani, had won as expected a landslide victory in
    another by-election which was also held on Sunday in Beirut.

    Sabeh earlier told reporters that the ruling majority candidate,
    Mohammed al-Amin Itani, had won as expected a landslide victory in
    another by-election which was also held on Sunday in Beirut.

    The by-elections were held to replace two anti-Syrian lawmakers killed
    in attacks blamed by the anti-Syrian March 14 majority on former
    powerbroker Damascus, which supports the Hibullah-led opposition.

    The two murdered MPs were Industry Minister Pierre Gemayel, a
    Christian who was gunned down in a Beirut suburb on November 21,
    2006, and Sunni Muslim Walid Eido, who was killed in a car bombing
    in Beirut on June 13.

    After the end of the by-elections, the two camps immediately called
    for self-restraint, as hundreds of supporters from both sides gathered
    in public squares amid a heavy deployment of army and security forces
    backed by armored vehicles.

    One person was slightly injured by youths throwing stones in Beirut's
    northern suburb of Jdeideh where supporters of the two camps had
    gathered in the same public square, an AFP photographer witnessed.

    In a televised speech Aoun had announced Khoury's victory over Gemayel,
    and appealed for calm.

    But Gemayel had refused to admit defeat until official results were
    announced and demanded a rerun of the vote in one mainly Armenian
    region where he claimed voter fraud.

    "We want elections to be repeated in the Burj Hammoud district,"
    Gemayel told his supporters gathered in his hometown of Bikfaya.

    He said there were reports from that area of people not living there
    or deceased casting votes as well as irregularities with voting cards.

    The Metn by-election has deeply split Lebanon's Christians ahead of
    polls to elect a new head of state.

    The outcome of the poll is expected to set the tone for presidential
    elections due to be held in September. Traditionally, the president
    is chosen from the Maronite Christian community in Lebanon.

    "The legend of Michel Aoun as the sole Christian leader has crumbled,"
    Walid Jumblat, a prominent leader of the ruling majority, told
    Lebanese television.

    "Amin Gemayel has won the political battle. Michel Aoun has fallen
    politically despite all his alliances," he said.

    Following the by-elections, parliament's challenge will still be to
    elect a new president to succeed pro-Syrian president Emile Lahoud
    by a November 25 deadline.

    While the majority controls enough seats to elect a president, it
    needs the opposition to take part for the two-thirds quorum required
    for parliament to convene.

    The by-elections came amid heightened political and security tensions
    in the deeply divided country as a deadly showdown between the army
    and Islamist extremists in the northern Palestinian refugee camp
    of Nahr al-bared continues to rage after 11 weeks.(AFP-Naharnet)(An
    Nahar photo shows Aoun supporters celebrating in Jdeideh)
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