Hezbollah Head Hails Electoral ‘Victory’ as Protection from Calls to Disarm

Hassan Nasrallah
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(AFP) The leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah on Monday praised provisional parliamentary election results as vindicating his Shiite group’s armed operations.

“This is a great political and moral victory for the resistance option that protects the sovereignty of the country,” Hassan Nasrallah said in a televised address.

A day after Lebanon’s first general election in nine years, Hezbollah and its allies looked set to secure a bloc large enough to block attempts for it to disarm, a longstanding demand of its political enemies, and give it a larger say in the county’s defense policies.

Nasrallah said his party’s gains would give “protection” to the group and declared “mission accomplished” after weeks of campaigning.

Hezbollah is considered a terrorist group by the US and Israel, but its political wing has long held seats in Lebanon’s parliament and is part of Lebanon’s outgoing coalition government.

Nasrallah did not say how many seats his group and its allies won, but early results show that they have won at least 43 of the legislature’s 128 seats, giving them the power to veto laws.

Early results show that Hezbollah’s bloc now has 13 members, one more than previously.

The results meant the group was poised to seal its dominance of Lebanese politics as its main foe, Prime Minister Saad Hariri, conceded heavy losses in the general election.

The polls were also marked by a low turnout of 49.2 percent and the emergence of a civil society movement, which is challenging Lebanon’s oligarchs and was set to break into parliament for the first time.

The number of Hezbollah lawmakers in the 128-seat parliament may not increase but astute pre-electoral tactics have secured it enough allies to withstand political challenges on strategic issues.

It will also benefit from the fragmentation of its foes, among them Hariri whose Sunni-dominated Future Movement could go down as the election’s biggest loser.

Before the results were officially announced, Hariri told reporters his party had won 21 seats, a drop from the 33 it controlled in the outgoing legislature.

“We were betting on a better result,” admitted Hariri, whose party nonetheless remains one of the largest in parliament.

“Hariri’s loss will be the distinguishing mark of these elections, which will have consequences on the battle to form a new government,” the pro-Hezbollah Al-Akhbar daily wrote earlier on Monday.

Hezbollah, which was created in the 1980s to fight against Israel and currently battles in Syria alongside regime forces, is listed as a terror organization by the United States.

The powerful Shiite group is a key political player in Lebanon where it has allied with the Christian party of President Michel Aoun and has participated in Hariri’s government since December 2016.

Interior Minister Nohad Machnouk announced the turnout figure at a news conference shortly after midnight and appeared to blame it on the new electoral law agreed last year.

“This is a new law and voters were not familiar with it, nor were the heads of polling stations,” he said. “Voting operations were very slow.”

As provisional estimates trickled in, some candidates’ supporters started celebrating in the streets after a polling operation marred only by a few violations but no major incident.

Lawmakers had extended their own mandate three times since 2009, ostensibly over security concerns linked to the war in neighboring Syria and political divisions that led to long and crippling institutional crises.

A higher turnout had been expected after the long electoral hiatus, but the new pre-printed ballots used Sunday appeared to confuse some voters.

Some voters also said that the sometimes absurd web of local alliances that saw some parties work together in one district and compete in others had put them off.

If official results expected in the afternoon confirm Hezbollah’s own estimates, the movement which Iran is essentially using for external operations will be better positioned to fend off any suggestion it should disarm.

The leading voice calling for the Tehran-funded movement to give up an arsenal that has now grown to outgun the national army has been Hariri, who pollsters now say looks less certain than before to keep his job.

Hezbollah members were accused over the 2005 assassination of Hariri’s father Rafiq, a charismatic former prime minister.

The new contours of parliament could leave Aoun in the position of kingmaker.

“The biggest swing vote will be President Aoun’s group, which will move among the other blocs. Hezbollah will benefit from the lack of a broad coalition against it,” political analyst Imad Salamey said.

Lebanon has often been a scene where the rivalry between the region’s two heavyweights Iran and Saudi Arabia has played out, but their political clients in this election seemed content to maintain the status quo.

Nabih Berri, who heads the Shiite party Amal and was allied with Hezbollah, looks all but certain to keep the position of parliament speaker he has held since 1992.

And the Lebanese Forces party of former warlord Samir Geagea looked set to score significant gains, with a projected 15 seats.

Despite the disappointing turnout among an electorate that included around 800,000 people who were too young to vote in the previous general polls, the new electoral law that allows smaller parties to run helped a civil society list break into parliament.

At least one of two women in the movement was expected to enter parliament, where they have pledged to extend their feisty campaign against political dynasties they charge are incompetent, self-serving and corrupt.

Alexandre Salha, a 30-year volunteer with the “Kulluna Watani” civil society list, gathered with other supporters in a Beirut cafe after the vote Sunday and said the most important thing was to get a foot in the door.

“We look forward to 2022 and we really believe that change has started. If we get one or two today, hopefully we’ll have 10 in four years. We made hope possible,” he said.

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