Follow Us On:

Members of the Lebanese diaspora cast votes in the Lebanese parliamentary election at the Bint Jbeil Cultural Center in Dearborn, May 8. Photo: Abbas Al Haj-Ahmed/The Arab American News

More than 100,000 Lebanese living abroad cast ballots for parliamentary elections on Friday and Sunday, many backing political newcomers after the worst crisis since Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war led to widespread poverty and a wave of emigration.

Some 225,000 Lebanese living overseas were eligible to participate in the elections in more than 50 countries, the first since Lebanon’s 2019 financial collapse and the port blast that killed more than 215 people and destroyed large parts of Beirut in August, 2020.

Overall turnout in overseas voting was around 60 percent, foreign ministry official Hadi Hachem told Reuters, or some 130,000 people.

That is roughly three times as many as during the last polls, in 2018.

Voters in Lebanon will cast their ballots on May 15.

Sources said the total number of voters in North America were 5556, representing 10.02 percent of those eligible to vote. The total number of voters in Latin America were 540, or 9.67 percent.

The turnout in Dearborn, with the largest Lebanese concentration in Metro Detroit, was much lower than at the Consulate General of Lebanon in Southfield.

Observers expect large numbers of expatriates to vote for candidates from a coalition of activists and independents who gained prominence during 2019 protests against the sectarian political elites whose corruption and mismanagement is widely blamed for the country’s catastrophic collapse.

“I want change,” said Samer Sobbi, a truck driver voting in Sydney on Sunday. “I don’t want the same people, the same people every four years, and if not the same people then their kids, if not their kids, their relatives. What about us?”

Australia is among those countries with the highest number of Diaspora voters, alongside Canada, the United States, Germany, the United Arab Emirates. France has the most at around 28,000 eligible voters.

Turnout in Australia closed at 55 percent, while in the UAE more than 70 percent of eligible voters cast their ballots, one of the highest turnouts registered.

I don’t want the same people, the same people every four years, and if not the same people then their kids, if not their kids, their relatives. What about us? – Lebanese voter in Sydney

The queue outside the Lebanese consulate in Dubai stretched for roughly a kilometre despite sweltering heat, and local police were seen fanning voters with pieces of cardboard.

“I came today just to vote and don’t care how long we wait in the heat. We need change,” said first-time voter Christiane Daou, 37.

Another longtime Dubai resident Joyce Daou (unrelated) expressed fears harbored by many voters that their votes may not be counted or could be otherwise interfered with – claims that have been denied by officials.

The ballot papers will be shipped back to Lebanon and stored at the central bank before being counted on election day. In parliamentary elections in 2018, the Lebanese Association for Democratic Elections, the main elections watchdog, deemed as “invalid” results from 479 overseas polling stations, with no explanation given by officials.

A Lebanese expat signs after she casts her vote for Lebanon's parliamentary election at the Consulate General of Lebanon in Dubai, United Arab Emirates May 8. Photo: Rula Rouhana/Reuters

A Lebanese expat signs after she casts her vote for Lebanon’s parliamentary election at the Consulate General of Lebanon in Dubai, United Arab Emirates May 8. Photo: Rula Rouhana/Reuters

“We are doing our part (by voting). Hopefully they will do their part and do not change the votes and leave this process to remain democratic and accurate,” Joyce Daou said.

Support for establishment parties was still evident; near the Berlin polling centre, more than 20 people chanted their backing for Nabih Berri, the veteran speaker of Lebanon’s parliament.

Others disagreed. Anton Wehb, a 62-year-old construction worker voting in Sydney, said Lebanon needed “new blood”, while in Paris, voter Sahar al-Jazzar said she would cast her ballot for “someone who wasn’t in power before.”

“Enough oppression, enough injustice and all the suffering we lived,” she said.

– Reuters and staff

The post Seeking change, more than 100,000 Lebanese cast ballots for May 15 election appeared first on ArabAmericanNews.


Notice: ob_end_flush(): Failed to send buffer of zlib output compression (0) in /home2/newmich1/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 5464