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BEIRUT: Fierce election battles shape up in the North, Metn, West Be

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  • BEIRUT: Fierce election battles shape up in the North, Metn, West Be

    Fierce election battles shape up in the North, Metn, West Bekaa
    By Nayla Assaf

    Daily Star staff
    Saturday, May 21, 2005

    BEIRUT: As election day draws closer, the electoral battle is expected
    to be fierce in North Lebanon, the Metn and the Western Bekaa. With the
    bloc of slain former Premier Rafik Hariri set to win all the seats in
    the capital and the Hizbullah-Amal coalition those of South Lebanon,
    there is unlikely to be much of an electoral battle in Beirut and South
    Lebanon. The much anticipated battle has shifted to other provinces.

    In the Northern Metn District, which will witness parliamentary
    elections with the rest of Mount Lebanon on July 12, electoral
    alliances are still unclear. But the opposition is expected to announce
    a joint list, grouping Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement (FPM),
    Metn MP Nassib Lahoud's Democratic Renewal Movement, the Phalange
    rank and file movement loyal to former President Amin Gemayel and
    the Lebanese Forces (LF).

    However, an observer of the electoral scene in the Metn said: "the
    prospect of an alliance is still dependent on alliances in other
    areas. If the FPM allies with the Progressive Socialist Party and
    the LF in the Baabda-Aley district, then its alliance with the rest
    of the opposition will go smoothly in the Metn."

    The picture might be clearer by Sunday, when Metn MP Pierre Gemayel
    is expected to announce his list at a rally in Bikfaya.

    However, it remains unclear whether an opposition alliance in the
    Metn will include former MP Gabriel Murr, who received the backing
    of the opposition, united when he ran for the by-election in 2002.

    Earlier squabbles among the opposition had triggered reports the
    FPM might seek an alliance with Deputy Speaker Michel Murr, a close
    Syrian loyalist.

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    But the FPM denied the reports, and Murr is more likely to unite with
    the Tashnag Armenian party and the loyalist faction of the Phalange,
    headed by former minister Karim Pakradouni.

    But by all accounts, a deal between the FPM and PSP leader Walid
    Jumblatt in Baabda-Aley will determine the alliances among the
    opposition in the rest of the country.

    In Second district in North Lebanon, which groups Tripoli, Minieh,
    Zghorta, Batroun and Koura, the opposition is likely to face a new
    potential alliance between former Premier Omar Karami and former
    Interior Minister, Suleiman Franjieh.

    But the opposition in the North, represented by such figures as Batroun
    MP Boutros Harb, opposition figure Samir Franjieh, Zghorta MP Nayla
    Mouawad, Koura MP Farid Makari, and Tripoli MP Samir Jisr, who are
    close to Saad Hariri, is set to win more seats than the loyalist list.

    It is still not clear, however, if the FPM, which enjoys strong
    support in the North, will be part of that coalition.

    George Haddad of the FPM said: "The North will be part of a package
    deal.

    Either we will ally with the rest of the opposition in all the country
    on the basis of a joint agenda to combat corruption, or we simply
    will not."

    In the Western Bekaa, the battle is between traditional pro-Syrian
    figures such as Elie Ferzli, Faysal Daoud and Abdel-Rahim Mrad and
    an odd coalition bringing together the loyalist Amal Movement with
    representatives of the opposition.
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