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Lebanon's Christians Play Election Kingmakers

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  • Lebanon's Christians Play Election Kingmakers

    LEBANON'S CHRISTIANS PLAY ELECTION KINGMAKERS

    Middle East Online
    May 27 2009

    Divided Lebanese Christians to 'tip the balance' either in favour of
    current majority or for Hezbollah.

    ZAHLE, Lebanon - Lebanon's divided Christians represent the swing
    vote in a legislative election in which the Hezbollah is vying to
    oust the faction which currently dominates parliament.

    "The Christian vote will tip the balance," said Melhem Chaoul,
    a sociology professor at the state-run Lebanese University.

    Lebanon's Christians are a minority made up mainly of Catholics,
    Maronites, Orthodox and Armenians.

    Today, Christians is claimed to make up almost 35 percent of Lebanon's
    four million inhabitants and their political loyalty is deeply divided
    between the two camps facing off in the June 7 vote.

    One side, ironically identified in Lebanese circles as the "Shiite
    Christians," backs the Hezbollah alliance while the so-called "Sunni
    Christians" favour the current majority led by Saad Hariri, son of
    slain ex-premier Rafiq Hariri.

    "Lebanon's Christians have failed to create for themselves a true
    force capable of transcending the political divisions in the country,"
    Chaoul said.

    He was referring to the political crisis that shook Lebanon in the
    aftermath of Rafiq Hariri's murder in 2005 and brought the country
    close to civil war last year.

    "The Christians didn't manage to set their own political agenda and
    simply follow one side or the other," Chaoul added. "Some campaign
    with the Shiites against the Sunnis, and vice versa."

    A campaign banner for one of the few independent candidates sums up
    the reality on the ground.

    "We do not want a Shiite Maronite, we do not want a Sunni Maronite,
    we want a true Maronite: Yes to a strong Christian role," it reads.

    Thanks to Lebanon's complex confessional system, Christians can
    influence the outcome of the upcoming legislative poll as the 128 seats
    in parliament are allocated equally between Christians and Muslims.

    For that reason, candidates in a handful of districts will be battling
    to win over the Christian vote.

    One key battleground, for example, will be the eastern town of Zahle,
    a Christian stronghold in the mainly Muslim Bekaa Valley, where five
    seats reserved for Christian candidates are up for grabs.

    The outcome of the vote for the town's two other parliamentary seats,
    one for a Sunni candidate and another for a Shiite, is already a given.

    "If it weren't for the Christians, there would be no electoral battle,"
    said Okab Sakr, a Muslim candidate allied with the majority in Zahle.

    The town's voters, for their part, say they are preparing for a tough
    battle to ensure their side wins.

    "If Hezbollah wins, we risk another war with Israel," said Elie Hallak,
    a 56-year-old teacher. "It already has a lot of power, and if it wins,
    it will do what it pleases."

    Tamar Apkarian, an Armenian supporter of the Hezbollah-led faction,
    disagrees.

    "As long as there is no guarantee that Israel will not attack us,
    we need Hezbollah's weapons to defend our country," she said.

    Israel waged a bloody 34-day war on Lebanon in the summer of 2006
    after Hezbollah fighters seized two Israeli soldiers in a deadly
    cross-border raid that aimed to free Lebanese soldiers from Israeli
    prisons. The bodies of the soldiers were returned in a prisoner swap
    earlier this year.

    The war claimed the lives of more than 1,200 people in Lebanon, most
    of them civilians, and more than 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers.

    Hezbollah, originally a resistance group formed to counter an Israeli
    occupation of south Lebanon, had forced the Israeli military out of
    Lebanon in 2000. Israel, however, continues to occupy the Lebanese
    Shabaa Farms.

    Israeli flights over Lebanon occur on an almost daily basis and are
    in breach of UN Security Council resolution 1710, which in August
    2006 ended the war.

    With huge public support in the Lebanese south, Hezbollah is poised to
    make stronger political gains in the upcoming parliamentary elections
    in Lebanon next June.
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