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Last update - 00:00 05/08/2007

Tens of thousands of Lebanese vote in elections to replace two slain lawmakers

By The Associated Press

Tens of thousands of Lebanese voted Sunday to replace two assassinated lawmakers in a tense election that has become a major showdown between the U.S.-backed government and its opponents.

The election's results could determine the political future of this deeply divided country, weeks ahead of a scheduled vote by parliament to elect a new president.

Sunday's vote closed at 6 P.M. and was largely peaceful. It took place amid tight security in two electoral districts, one in Beirut and the other in Lebanon's Metn region, a Christian stronghold where the community is deeply divided.

Official results were expected to be announced by the Interior Ministry on Monday, but initial results from each candidate's own estimates were expected to be announced late Sunday.

Voters picked candidates to replace legislator and cabinet minister Pierre Gemayel, a Christian who was shot dead in November, and lawmaker Walid Eido, a Sunni Muslim who was killed in a Beirut car bomb in June. Both were allies of the U.S.-backed Lebanese government and vocal opponents of neighboring Syria, which controlled Lebanon for 29 years until it was forced out in 2005.

In Beirut, the vote for Eido's seat was expected to be easily won by Mohammed al-Amin Itani, a candidate of parliament majority leader Saad Hariri's Future Movement, particularly since the Hezbollah-led opposition did not officially sponsor a candidate.

But in Metn, the vote for Gemayel's seat is a bitter contest between two candidates including the assassinated politician's father, Amin Gemayel, who was president of Lebanon for much of the 1980s.

Gemayel has decided to compete for his son's seat on behalf of the ruling coalition. He faces off against Kamil Khoury, who is supported by Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun, a former army commander and interim prime minister allied with the Hezbollah-led opposition. Aoun's party dominated the district in the 2005 legislative elections.

A local TV station called the Metn election the mother of all battles. "Vote for freedom and independence by voting for Gemayel in Metn and Itani in Beirut," read a banner at the entrance of Gemayel's hometown of Bikfaya.

Pictures of Gemayel and his slain son were displayed on balconies, cars and electricity poles.

At many polling stations in Metn, Gemayel's supporters distributed white roses to voters before they cast their ballots in memory of the late minister.

Gemayel and his wife, Joyce, began the day by visiting their son's grave before heading to the polling station. As he later entered a school to vote, about 20 supporters of his Phalange Party chanted "Pierre lives on!"

"We visited Pierre to ... promise him that his blood will not be in vain," Gemayel told reporters.

"They have been provoking us all day," said Bahiya Mizher, a Aoun supporter wearing an orange T-shirt and cap - the color of his Free Patriotic Movement. "But God is with us and we shall win, she said."

Mizher, like many others, believes the election is about much more than just a seat. "The battle is between two diverging tracks ... what happens today will have major repercussions on the political future of the country," she said, sitting on the ground in Bikfaya outside a polling station.

While pro-government politicians accuse the opposition of being agents for Iran and Syria, Hezbollah leaders and Aoun accuse the ruling majority of subservience to the United States.

Aoun has said the Metn elections are to liberate the country from political feudalism, sectarian intolerance and political bribery, a reference to the Gemayel family's role in Lebanese politics since the 1930s.

The rivalry between Aoun and Gemayel could further divide the Christian community and is generally seen as a battle of wills between the ruling coalition and the opposition, weeks before parliament is to elect a new president. According to the constitution, the current president must step down before Nov. 23.

As Maronite Christians, both Gemayel and Aoun are eligible to run for the position, with the latter already having declared his candidacy.

The elections could also escalate the country's deepening political crisis because Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's Western-backed government called them without the required approval of President Emile Lahoud, who has blocked attempts to replace the lawmakers. Lahoud considers Siniora's government to be illegitimate.

Lahoud is allied with the Hezbollah-led, pro-Syrian opposition, as is Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who has said he will not recognize the results of the contests.

Gemayel and the government have accused Damascus of being behind the assassination of his son and a number of other anti-Syrian politicians and public figures over the last two years, part of what they deem Syria's plan to end the majority's rule through attrition. Syria has denied the allegations.

With Eido's death, Siniora's margin in parliament has been whittled down to only four seats.

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