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By-Election Leaves Lebanon's Christians Deeply Divided

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  • By-Election Leaves Lebanon's Christians Deeply Divided

    BY-ELECTION LEAVES LEBANON'S CHRISTIANS DEEPLY DIVIDED
    Scheherezade Faramarzi

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Aug 06, 2007

    Lebanon's Christians were more divided than ever Monday after the
    opposition narrowly won a bruising election pitting two of the
    community's most prominent leaders against each other.

    The results of the parliamentary by-election underlined how neither
    side in Lebanon's political crisis _ the anti-Syrian government and
    the pro-Syrian opposition _ has been able to decisively swing the
    Christians to their camp.

    Shiite Muslims, led by Hezbollah, are overwhelmingly behind the
    opposition, while Sunnis form the backbone of support for Prime
    Minister Fuad Saniora's ruling coalition.

    But Christians, around a third of Lebanon's 4 million people, have
    shown no such cohesion, splitting nearly evenly along ideological
    lines. The split was made clear in Sunday's parliamentary by-election
    in the Christian stronghold of Metn, in Mount Lebanon north of Beirut.

    The pro-government candidate, Amin Gemayel, a former president and the
    head of one of Lebanon's most powerful Maronite Christian families,
    conceded defeat Monday after officials announced his rival had won
    by a slim margin of 418 votes.

    His opponent was a little known candidate, Kamil Khoury, who had the
    backing of the most prominent Christian leader in the opposition,
    Michel Aoun.

    The result "reaffirms the existing stalemate," said analyst Rami
    Khoury with the Issam Fares think tank at the American University
    of Beirut. "It shows a very polarized Christian community, which is
    not surprising because it reflects the situation in the rest of the
    country and in the rest of the Middle East."

    It also foreshadows what many expect to be a dangerous deadlock later
    this year, when parliament must choose a new president to replace
    pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud, whose term ends. Under Lebanon's
    division of power among its sects, the presidency must be held by a
    Maronite Christian, but no Maronite leader can boost his bid among
    lawmakers by claiming to represent the entire community.

    Gemayel's loss is a setback for his potential as a candidate.

    The 65-year-old was running in his home district and had an implicit
    endorsement by the powerful Maronite patriarch. He was seeking to
    replace his son, Pierre Gemayel, who was gunned down in November in
    an attack that government supporters blamed on Syria.

    Gemayel got more of the Maronite vote than his rival _ 75 percent,
    according to press reports. But Aoun's candidate made up for it by
    getting other Christians' votes.

    Aoun has said he will stand for the presidency. But the slim margin
    of victory Sunday damages Aoun's attempts to present himself as the
    top Christian politician.

    "Aoun is still a formidable figure but cannot really present himself
    as the leading Maronite figure anymore. That's probably the single most
    significant element in the election," said Rami Khoury, the analyst.

    Gemayel supporters blamed his loss on the large ethnic Armenian
    community in the Metn district _ represented by the Tashnag Party _
    saying Khoury was not representative of the Maronites, who form a
    majority in the district.

    Armenians are largely Catholic or Orthodox Christian. Maronites
    are the largest Christian sect in Lebanon and once dominated the
    country's politics.

    Many fear the stalemate may lead to the formation of competing
    governments if parliament fails to elect a new president by the
    Nov. 23 deadline, when Lahoud has to step down.

    Saniora's backers are hoping to finally put in place an anti-Syrian
    figure in the presidency to strengthen their power. They rose to
    control the government after Syrian troops withdrew from Lebanon
    in 2005, ending Damascus' decadeslong control of Lebanon. But the
    political struggle with the Hezbollah-led opposition has since sapped
    the anti-Syrian movement's power and paralyzed the government.

    Another by-election was held Sunday lawmaker Walid Eido, a Sunni
    Muslim who was killed in a June car bombing there. A pro-government
    candidate, Mohammed al-Amin Itani, won that race easily.

    With the elections, Saniora still holds a slim five-seat majority in
    parliament, but still unknown is whether the two winners will be able
    to take their posts.

    The by-elections were held despite Lahoud's refusal to give his
    approval for them, as required by the constitution, and his ally
    parliament speaker Nabih Berri has said he will not recognize the
    results. Moreover, parliament has been unable to meet for months
    because of the political standoff.
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