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 Lebanon's Election: Free but Not Fair 
 
By Annia Ciezadlo* 
 
 
BEIRUT -- Sunday, May 22, 2005;
The Washington Post, 
Page B01  
 
 
 
Every week, my husband and I take a rickety old taxi to Hezbollah country. The 
emerald city of downtown Beirut, with its glittering luxury towers, drops away 
behind us; ruined buildings, their shell-shocked hulks festooned with laundry, 
loom ahead like ghost ships. 
 
We soon leave Beirut proper and reach the dahiya -- the dense and sprawling 
Shiite crescent, half suburb, half slum, that cradles the city's southern 
borders. In the dahiya, home to my in-laws and a large swath of Beirut's 
population, the recent anti-Syrian protests that became known as the Cedar 
Revolution seem like a fairy tale. "As an area, as dahiya, we're not concerned 
about what's happening in downtown," one college student told me in March while 
demonstrations raged in Martyrs' Square. "We regard what's happening as a joke." 
 
Around the world, however, the candy-cane banners and multilingual college kids 
of the uprising caught the imagination of millions. Holding parliamentary 
elections on time, free of Syrian influence, became democracy's new rallying 
cry. President Bush cautioned against delaying the poll, scheduled to run on 
four consecutive Sundays beginning May 29. 
 
But Bush and other well-meaning Americans are ignoring a fundamental problem: 
With Syria gone, Lebanon's elections will be free, but they won't be fair. In 
Lebanon, Muslim votes, especially Shiite votes, count less than those of 
Christians. Literally. 
 
This inequality dates back to 1943, when the French handed Lebanon over to the 
country's French-speaking Maronite Christian elite and founded what is called 
the confessional system, with parliamentary and executive offices parceled out 
among the major religious sects. In theory, it provides a balance of religious 
power; in practice, it's an entrenched imbalance -- and a writhing rat's nest of 
corruption, with outside influences like Syria easily playing one sect off 
another. 
 
Lebanon's election law creates a byzantine web of provinces and districts, 
exquisitely gerrymandered to give each of 18 sects a certain number of seats in 
parliament. The number of seats each sect gets bears little relation to its 
current weight in the population. The U.S. State Department estimates Lebanon's 
population at about 70 percent Muslim and 23 percent Christian. (Estimates vary, 
because Lebanon hasn't held a census in 73 years, but few question that Muslims 
are a majority, with Shiites outweighing Sunnis). Yet to this day, the 
parliament must be split equally between Christians and Muslims. During the last 
election, in 2000, politicians running in the primarily Muslim south had to get 
three times as many votes to win a seat as those running in some Christian 
areas. 
 
In order to maintain this political skew, Lebanese electoral law requires all 
voters to return to their family's ancestral home towns to cast their ballots, 
regardless of where they actually live, or even where they were born. Shiites 
have to travel to a "Shiite area" to vote for mostly Shiite candidates, and so 
on. Thus my husband's parents, who have lived in the dahiya for more than 40 
years, will have to travel to Bint Jubayl, almost to the Israeli border, if they 
want to vote. They're old and frail--most likely, they won't bother to make the 
two-hour journey, just to elect somebody who won't even represent them. "Nobody 
deserves it!" scoffs my mother-in-law, setting down plates of savory stuffed 
zucchini and hand-rolled grape leaves. 
 
Another of the many ironies of the system is that Lebanon's preeminent 
politician can't ever be president; he's barred from running for prime minister; 
and he isn't even eligible to be speaker of parliament. Why? Because that 
politician -- opposition leader Walid Jumblatt -- is a Druze Muslim. The 
confessional system mandates a "troika" of leadership, where the president has 
to be a Maronite Christian, the prime minister a Sunni Muslim, and the speaker 
of parliament a Shiite Muslim -- regardless of who has the best qualifications 
for any job. 
 
This state-sponsored discrimination extends all the way down to the lowest 
levels of the public sector, where government functionaries choose civil 
servants, from cops to college professors, by how they pray. 
 
Our friend, science professor Mahmoud Faraj, experienced this firsthand. With a 
French doctorate and 18 academic publications to his name, Mahmoud is well 
qualified to work in any Lebanese university. But one of the colleges he applied 
to already had its quota of Shiites. "We're going to try to smuggle you in," the 
dean told him, "but don't tell anyone." Smuggle him in? Mahmoud was disgusted. 
"You don't really belong to this country," he says. "You belong to your sect." 
 
In America, where he lived for 17 years, Mahmoud worked for a Fortune 500 
corporation and voted -- twice -- for George W. Bush. In Lebanon, if he goes to 
the trouble of voting, he'll have little alternative to Hezbollah, the armed 
Shiite militia, because that's who dominates the slate in his ancestral village. 
He's thinking about casting a blank ballot. 
 
In America, Mahmoud felt as though his vote mattered. Here, he doesn't. "I'm 50 
years old, and I've never voted in my own country," he says, with a sad laugh. 
"With this system now, I think my votes will be insignificant." 
 
I see the results of this disenfranchisement every week. In the summer, when 
Beirut's seaside breeze turns to a steamy blast, the Electricite du Liban stops 
bringing electricity to the dahiya, as it does every summer. The people turn to 
ishtiraq, literally Arabic for "subscription": You pay a fee to some 
neighborhood Croesus who owns a generator. Look up, anywhere in the dahiya, and 
you'll see the sky through a snarl of electrical wires that siphon ishtiraq from 
one concrete-block building to another. 
 
Enter Hezbollah -- a political machine for people left out of the political 
system. The party's special status as an armed faction is the Shiites' de facto 
consolation prize for being disenfranchised. For Lebanon's underrepresented 
Shiite plurality, guns are the great equalizers: Arms and money flow through 
Syria from Iran, which is believed to finance the militant group to the tune of 
millions of dollars per month. In the dahiya and southern Lebanon, Hezbollah has 
become a powerful shadow government, building a network of schools, hospitals 
and charities. 
 
The consensus outside Lebanon is that Hezbollah should disarm, as required by 
United Nations Resolution 1559, and take its place in Lebanon's evolving 
democracy. But the question is, how? In the endless horse trade of Lebanese 
politics, Hezbollah will want something in exchange for surrendering its arms. 
If the party stops being Iran's gun-for-hire against Israel, it stands to lose 
not just political power, but millions in subsidy. Hezbollah won't consent to 
giving all that up while Lebanon's political deck is stacked so heavily against 
Shiites. 
 
The Bush administration seems to be waiting until after the elections to address 
the Hezbollah issue. But the upcoming elections are a rare opportunity: If Bush 
wants to help Lebanon disarm Hezbollah peacefully -- and if he wants to deserve 
his reputation as a liberator of the Arab world's downtrodden Shiites -- he'll 
encourage Lebanon's Christians to give up their special privileges. And if 
Hezbollah leader Hasan Nasrallah is the pragmatist he's reputed to be, he'll 
accept ballots and a census in exchange for his rocket launchers. 
 
The Taif Accord, the 1989 agreement that has governed Lebanon since the civil 
war, requires the country to abolish the confessional system. So far, very few 
politicians have made any sincere attempt to do so. But the Lebanese people feel 
differently. A recent Zogby poll showed that 63 percent wanted to abolish the 
troika, and 69 percent wanted the president to be elected in a one-person, 
one-vote poll, instead of being chosen, as he is now, by parliament. Not 
surprisingly, Maronites were divided on both questions, while Muslims clearly 
preferred a secular system. A new Lebanese civil society group, Hayyabina 
(meaning "Let's go"), recently called for a referendum to end religious 
affirmative action. The Bush administration and the United Nations should 
support them -- not only because it might help disarm Hezbollah, but because 
it's the democratic thing to do. 
 
Meanwhile, politicians are plastering their grinning faces all over most of 
Beirut. But in the dahiya, few bother: Most people who live there can't vote 
there anyway. Many of them plan to sit out the elections -- my mother-in-law 
included. 
 
Would she vote if she could do it close to home, in Beirut? She can't quite 
believe the question: "What do you think this is?" she asks sardonically, 
picking up our dishes. "America?" 
 
*Annia Ciezadlo is a Beirut-based freelance writer who has reported from 
Lebanon, Syria and Iraq for the New Republic and the Christian Science Monitor. 
 
Author's e-mail: 
anniaciezadlo-outlook@yahoo.com  
  
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