TRIPOLI (AFP) ― Liberals claimed an early lead on Sunday in vote counting across the country after Libya held its first free elections following Moamer Gadhafi’s ouster, winning plaudits from the international community.
If the trend is confirmed, Libya ― unlike neighboring Tunisia and Egypt whose strongmen were also toppled in last year’s Arab Spring ― will buck the trend of electoral success for Islamist movements.
“Early reports show that the coalition is leading the polls in the majority of constituencies,” the secretary general of the liberal National Forces Alliance, Faisal Krekshi, told AFP.
The alliance, which groups more than 40 small parties, is headed by Mahmud Jibril who played a prominent role as rebel prime minister during last year’s popular revolt that toppled dictator Gadhafi and ended his four-decade rule.
Mahmoud Jibril speaks to the media during a presser at the National Forces Allies headquarters in Tripoli on Sunday. (AP-Yonhap News)
The leader of one of Libya’s main Islamist parties, also basing his assessment on their vote count observers, acknowledged that the rival coalition had the edge in the country’s two largest cities.
“The National Forces Alliance achieved good results in some large cities except Misrata. They have a net lead in Tripoli and in Benghazi,” said Mohammed Sawan, who heads the Justice and Construction party.
“But it is a tight race for us in the south,” added Sawan, a former political prisoner and member of Libya’s Muslim Brotherhood, which launched the party.
The bulk of Libya’s population and registered electorate is concentrated in the capital, which lies in the west of the oil-rich desert country, and in the eastern city of Benghazi.
Libyans on Saturday voted for a General National Congress, a 200-member legislative assembly which will steer the country through a transition period.
Turnout was above 60 percent, the electoral commission said.
A total of 80 seats in the incoming congress are reserved for political entities while the remaining 120 are held for individual candidates, some of whom are openly allied to specific parties. Altogether, 3,707 candidates stood in 72 districts nationwide.
Sawan told AFP the results were mixed in terms of which party was performing better at the polls when it comes down to allies and sympathizers who are running as individual candidates.
Votes were still being tallied by Libya’s electoral commission with preliminary results expected by Monday night or early on Tuesday.
But early reports in local media seemed to back the party leaders’ claims.
Private channel Al-Assima TV reported that the liberal coalition was far ahead in the capital, scooping 80 percent in the district of Tripoli Center and 90 percent in the impoverished district of Abu Slim.
Its lead, the channel said, was also strong in the troubled east, with preliminary figures giving it 70 percent in Benghazi and 80 percent in Al-Bayda, hometown of Libya’s interim leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil.
These figures were unofficial, however.
“The first winner is the Libyan people,” declared a beaming Nuri Abbar, head of the electoral commission, at the end of a rollercoaster polling day which was briefly clouded by unrest in the east.
Apart from acts of sabotage in the restive east and one death in Ajdabiya when unknown gunmen opened fire near a polling station, the vote was held in a festive atmosphere in the main cities.
Leading a chorus of praise, U.S. President Barack Obama called the vote “another milestone” in Libya’s transition to democracy.
“On behalf of the American people, I extend my congratulations to the people of Libya for another milestone on their extraordinary transition to democracy,” he said.
“Today’s historic election underscores that the future of Libya is in the hands of the Libyan people.”
Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague said the vote was a “landmark,” while his Italian counterpart Giulio Terzi hailed a “watershed” moment for its former colony and crucial energy source.
Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, who heads a team of 21 European Union observers, said large numbers of Libyans had voted “peacefully and free of fear and intimidation.”
The make-up of the congress being elected has been a matter of heated debate, with factions such as the federalist movement in the east calling for more seats and staging acts of sabotage both before and during the elections.
Libya has not seen national elections since the era of the late King Idris, whom Gadhafi deposed in a bloodless coup in 1969.
Political parties were banned as an act of treason under Gadhafi’s iron-fisted rule. On Saturday, 142 parties fielded candidates.