Libyans started voting yesterday in the first parliamentary election since last year’s ouster and slaying of late Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, a major step forward in the country’s tumultuous transition to democratic rule.
The election for a 200-seat legislature was being held amid intense regional rivalries, fears of violence and calls for a boycott. However, lines began to form outside polling centers more than an hour before they were scheduled to open in the capital Tripoli. Policemen and army soldiers were guarding the centers, searching voters as well as election workers.
“This is history in the making,” 26-year-old medic Farid Fadil said as he waited to vote outside a polling center in the capital Tripoli.
Photo: AFP
After four decades of Qaddafi’s erratic one-man rule, Fadil like many Libyans, was overjoyed at the chance to choose his country’s leaders: “We were ruled by a man who saw himself as the state.”
Libya’s election is the latest fruit of Arab Spring revolts against authoritarian leaders. It is likely to be dominated by Islamist parties of all shades, a similar outcome to elections held in the country’s neighbors Egypt and Tunisia, which had had their own, though much less bloody, uprisings.
In the oil-rich east, where there is a thriving autonomy movement, calls for a boycott and pre-election violence have cast a shadow over the vote. However, in Tripoli, voters were jubilant.
Libyans flashed the “V” for victory sign as they entered the polling centers. Motorists honked their horns as they drove past to greet the voters lined outside. Others shouted: Allahu Akbar, or “God is great,” from their car windows.
“The turnout is extraordinary,” election monitor Mohammed Shady said. “Everyone is being very cooperative. They want the day to be a success and it will be.”
The election lines brought together Libya’s women, men, youth and children accompanying their parents. There were women in black abayas, or black robes, bearded men, elderly men and women on wheelchairs or using canes to support themselves. Some voters arrived at polling centers holding the Libyan red, green and black flag or wrapping it around their shoulders.
Voters distributed sweets to mark the occasion and women hugged each other or sang as they waited in line.
Others chanted: “The martyrs’ blood will not go in vain,” a reference to the thousands of anti-regime rebels killed by Qaddafi’s forces.
Others held pictures of loved ones killed in last year’s ruinous civil war.
“Look at the lines. Everyone came of his and her own free will. I knew that day would come and Qaddafi would not be there forever,” said Riyadh Al-Alagy, a 50-year-old civil servant in Tripoli. “He left us a nation with a distorted mind, a police state with no institutions. We want to start from zero,” he said, as a woman came out of the polling center ululating and flashing the purple ink on one of her fingers. The ink is used to prevent multiple voting.
Yesterday’s vote was a key milestone on a nine-month transition toward democracy for the country after a bitter civil war that ended with the capture and killing of Qaddafi in October last year. Many Libyans had hoped the oil-rich nation of 6 million would quickly thrive and become a magnet for investment, but the country has suffered a virtual collapse in authority that has left formidable challenges. Armed militias still operate independently, and deepening regional and tribal divisions erupt into violence with alarming frequency.
On the eve of the vote, gunmen shot down a helicopter carrying polling materials near the eastern city of Benghazi, the birthplace of the revolution, killing one election worker, National Transitional Council spokesman Saleh Darhoub said. The crew survived after a crash landing.
Libyan Prime Minister Abdurrahim el-Keib vowed the government would ensure a safe vote and condemned the election worker’s killing and those who seek to derail the vote.
It was not immediately clear who was behind Friday’s shooting, but it was the latest unrest in a messy run-up to the vote that has put a spotlight on some of the major fault lines in the country — the east-west divide and the Islamist versus secularist political struggle.
Many in Libya’s oil-rich east feel slighted by the election laws issued by the National Transitional Council, the body that led the rebel cause during the civil war. The laws allocate the east less than a third of the parliamentary seats, with the rest going to the western region that includes Tripoli and the sparsely-settled desert south.
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