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Fatah leading over Hamas in local polls
Foreign Desk Report
RAMALLAH (West Bank)—Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party
far outstripped militant group Hamas in a round of West Bank municipal
elections seen as a test of political clout ahead of 2006 parliamentary
polls. Fatah official Jamal al-Shobaki, who heads the Higher Commission
for Local Elections, said on Saturday that final results gave Fatah
control of nearly half the 104 West Bank municipal councils contested on
Thursday.
He said Fatah won 51 councils in the third round of West Bank and Gaza
municipal elections. Hamas, which will challenge Fatah for the first
time in the January parliamentary elections, took 13. Other parties won
40 councils. The results appeared to show that Hamas, which has about 30
percent support in opinion polls, had not made quite such a strong
showing as it did in the first two rounds of municipal ballots in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
As well as being seen as an indicator of support ahead of the
parliamentary election, Thursday’s poll was the first ballot since
Israel completed a pullout from Gaza on September 12. A fourth stage of
council elections is due later this year. Hamas said the results were no
indicator of what might happen at parliamentary elections because only a
relatively small number of voters had participated in the current round.
Hamas, committed to destroying Israel, boycotted the only previous
parliamentary ballot in 1996. “The big cities still wait in the fourth
phase ... which makes this round, regardless of the results, not of
major significance in comparison with what is to come,” Abu Zuhri said.
Analysts predict that support for Hamas will prove larger in some of the
major population centres, like Gaza City. Fatah has been struggling to
overcome public dissatisfaction with corruption and mismanagement in the
Palestinian Authority while Hamas also won support for its leading role
in suicide attacks on Israel during an uprising since 2000.
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