Syrian election vote counting begins

Syrian election vote counting begins

Election officials began counting votes in Syria's presidential election early on Wednesday as polls closed in government-held areas. 

State-run media reported that voting closed at midnight and that officials began the process of checking the number of votes against lists of registered voters to ensure the numbers matched.

Syrians on Tuesday voted in their first election in nearly 50 years, which the incumbent Bashar al-Assad is widely expected to win. Assad and his father Hafez have previously renewed their mandates in referendums.

Assad's opponents have dismissed as a charade in the midst of Syria's devastating civil war.

Rebel fighters, the political opposition in exile, Western powers and Gulf Arabs say no credible vote can be held in a country where swathes of territory are outside state control and millions have been displaced by conflict.

State television said voting had been extended for five hours past the original deadline "because of the massive influx of voters". The polls closed at midnight, local time.

Voting only took place in government-controlled territories, meaning those displaced by fighting or living in rebel-held areas were unable to take part.

The opposition dismissed the vote as a "farce" that would prolong the country's three-year conflict. The vote excluded regime opponents from running.

The US called the election a disgrace, saying Assad "has no more credibility today than he did yesterday."

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from the Al Masnaa border crossing in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, said: "The opposition says this is a farce, they don't recognize these elections. They say there is no way it could be legitimate while civil war is raging in the country, while it's being organised by the same president they want to overthrow.

Syrian television showed Assad casting his ballot at a school in the Damascus neighborhood of al-Maliki. He was accompanied by his wife, Asma.

Assad faces two practically unknown competitors - Maher al-Hajjad and Hassan al-Nuri.

Nuri, who studied in the US and speaks English, told the AFP news agency he expected to come second after Assad.

Both he and Hajjar only lightly criticized Assad's rule for fear of being linked to an opposition branded "terrorists" by the regime. The two men instead focused on corruption and economic policy.

The vote took place as the war continued, with the air force bombarding rebel areas in Aleppo and fierce fighting in Hama, Damascus, Idlib and Daraa.
Observers from countries allied to the regime - North Korea, Iran and Russia - supervised the election, while a security plan was reportedly put in place in Syrian cities to prevent possible attacks against voters and polling stations.

 


PHOTO CAPTION

Employees counting the votes of the three candidates in Syrian presidential elections following to the closure of the polls in Damascus, Syria, early 04 June 2014.


Aljazeera

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