Syrians in government areas vote in first local polls since 2011

Syrians in government-controlled areas have cast their ballots in the first local elections since 2011, when the first protests against President Bashar al-Assad’s rule were violently oppressed.

Polling booths opened at 7:00am local time (04:00 GMT) across government-held parts of the country where more than 40,000 candidates would compete for 18,478 seats on local administrative councils.

Syrian state television broadcast footage of voters around Damascus and in the coastal government bastions of Tartus and Latakia.

They dropped their ballots into plastic boxes as election officials looked on.

The channel also showed images of voting in Deir Az Zor, the eastern city recaptured in full last year by Syrian troops after fierce battles against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group.

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No voting was taking place in areas outside government control, including Kurdish-held parts of the northeast and the largest rebel-held piece of territory, northwest Idlib province, home to some three million people.

According to the AFP news agency, there appeared to be fewer people heading to the polls than in previous presidential or parliamentary elections.

Mohammad Kabbadi, a 42-year-old government employee, cast his ballot in the Bab Sharqi district of the capital for a candidate from his neighbourhood.

“I know exactly who I am going to vote for – he’s young, active and his victory will bring good things to residents of this area,” said Kabbadi.

‘Why vote?’

A vast majority of the candidates are members of the ruling Baath party or affiliated to it, which deterred some people from casting their ballot.

“Why vote? Will anything change? Let’s be honest,” said Humam, a 38-year-old working in the capital’s Mazzeh district who opted to stay at home on Sunday.

“Everyone knows the results are sealed in advance for a single party, whose members will win in a process that’s closer to an appointment than it is to an election.”

Mazen Gharibah, a researcher with the London School of Economics, said the Syrian government was looking to use this election to send the message that the country was on a path “towards recovery.”

“This election is an integral part of the Syrian government’s propaganda, that its heading towards a recovery, that the community is healing, that the Damascus-based government is still a functioning government and that it’s heading towards a better place.

“The second reason it’s holding this election is for logistical reasons. After the vast military gains, the forced displacements in Eastern Ghouta, Aleppo, Deraa, Homs etc, the regime is trying to increase its presence in these areas and appoint local council members.”

IDP’s and refugees cannot vote

The number of seats in this year’s elections had slightly increased from the roughly 17,000 available posts in the last elections, as smaller villages had been promoted to fully fledged municipalities.

Council members serve four-year terms at the municipal level and are mostly responsible for service provision and other administrative matters.

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Those elected in this round are expected to have more responsibilities than their predecessors, particularly linked to reconstruction and urban development.

However, Gharibah said with the law prohibiting displaced Syrians and refugees from voting, turnout was likely to be low.

“The general election law in Syria, what’s known as law number five for 2014, says the right to vote in local elections can only be done where you were born or the place you have your civil registry.

“So, if you’re from Aleppo and you have been living in Damascus for the past 30 years, you cannot vote for the municipality for Damascus, you have to physically cast your ballot in Aleppo to be able to participate in these elections.

“With more than six million IDPs, they won’t have the right to vote unless they can physically their ballots in their areas, and that’s not possible for a lot of areas.

“And wit the law also prohibiting absentee voting and voting by proxy, refugees – people living outside of Syria’s borders – also cannot vote.”

Syria last held local elections in December 2011, just nine months into the seven-year war which, according to UNHCR figures, has seen nearly 500,000 people killed and displaced more than 11 million.

Syria last held parliamentary elections in 2016 and a presidential vote in 2014 that saw Assad win a landslide with 88.7 percent of the vote, renewing his reign for another seven years.

 

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