The Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) is a local non-profit, non-partisan Lebanese human rights organization in Beirut that was established by the Franco-Lebanese Movement SOLIDA (Support for Lebanese Detained Arbitrarily) in 2006. SOLIDA has been active since 1996 in the struggle against arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and the impunity of those perpetrating gross human violations.

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June 8, 2012

The Daily Star - Lebanon behind Arab Spring states on electoral reform, June 8 2012


By Van Meguerditchian
BEIRUT: With no agreement on the horizon about a new electoral law and parliamentary elections a year away, many Lebanese are eyeing the electoral achievements made by Tunisia and Egypt following the Arab Spring.
Items of electoral reform that activists have promoted for years have now been adopted in Tunisia and Egypt, after popular pro-democracy demonstrations led to the collapse of regimes that had ruled for decades.
But Lebanon is far from reaching agreement on its own electoral change, according to Adnan Melki, secretary-general of the Lebanese Association for Democratic Reform.
“Developments in the Arab world put Lebanon and its electoral law under close scrutiny,” Melki told The Daily Star Thursday.
In 2008, Parliament passed a law allowing millions of Lebanese living abroad to vote in elections. But a mechanism adopted by PM Najib Mikati’s Cabinet and put in place by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has failed to gain support among expatriates.
Of the at least 10 million Lebanese living abroad, by April less than 5,000 had registered their names to vote at foreign embassies, according to Foreign Affairs Minister Adnan Mansour.
In contrast, Egypt’s administrative court ordered the government to adopt a mechanism that would allow Egyptian expatriates to participate in parliamentary and presidential elections, said Ahmad al-Hassan Zard, an official at the Egyptian Embassy in Beirut.
Speaking at UNESCO Palace Thursday during an event entitled the National Day for Electoral Reform, Zard said that “the revolution of Jan. 25 quickly turned a dream into a reality.”
Zard said that at least 200,000 Egyptian expatriates voted in parliamentary elections after registering on the website of the country’s Higher Judicial Election Commission.
“After filling in their personal information and national ID number [online], each person was given a special registration code that identified them with their respective embassies.”
Some 10 months after the popular uprising that ousted former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, parliamentary elections were held in three phases between November 2011 and January 2012.
Zard added that registered voters printed their ballots, enclosed them in an envelope and delivered them to their embassies.
According to Zard, half of the Egyptians known to be in Lebanon participated in the country’s first post-Mubarak presidential elections.
Egypt abolished a Mubarak-era woman’s quota ahead of its parliamentary elections; in contrast, Tunisia’s High Independent Electoral Commission required half the candidates on all electoral lists to be women.
“Unfortunately though, only 59 out of 217 of the elected of the parliament were women,” said Al-Asaad al-Mahyirsi, a representative of the Tunisian Embassy in Beirut.
He also said that the establishment of the High Independent Electoral Commission in Tunisia was crucial to ensuring that last October’s elections were democratic and transparent.
“Many of the reforms ahead of our elections were made possible because all [political parties] were able to reach agreement on them,” Mahyirsi added.
Though largescale calls for electoral reform in Lebanon preceded those in Egypt and Tunisia, in the past few years change has been hampered by instability and political bickering between rival political coalitions.
One group working for electoral change is the Civil Campaign for Electoral Reform founded in 2006.
The CCER calls for proportional representation instead of the current winner-take-all system. It also calls for 33 percent of electoral lists to be women, lowering the voting age to 18 and for the establishment of an Independent Electoral Commission to oversee polls.
Despite the myriad of electoral proposals that have been suggested as alternatives to the current electoral system, which closely resembles one instituted in 1960, a senior CCER official told The Daily Star that no major reforms are likely to be passed before 2013.
For the 2009 parliamentary elections, the country stuck with a 49-year-old law, said Melki.
“The month of June is a crucial month for this Cabinet, it must fulfill what it pledged in its ministerial policy statement and issue a new electoral law at least one year before the 2013 elections,” Melki said.


http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Jun-08/176115-lebanon-behind-arab-spring-states-on-electoral-reform.ashx#axzz1xGwpzapL

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