EU election monitors fan out ahead of Sunday vote in Lebanon

Chief Observer of EU EOM Lebanon 2018 Elena Valenciano gives a press conference in Beirut on May 4, 2018 ahead of the country’s parliamentary elections on May 6. (AFP)
Updated 04 May 2018
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EU election monitors fan out ahead of Sunday vote in Lebanon

  • Over a hundred observers from European Union countries, as well as Norway and Sweden, will be working during the elections.
  • The Lebanese government invited the observers to monitor and assess the voting scheduled for Sunday.

BEIRUT: European Union election monitors are deploying around Lebanon, ahead of the country’s first parliamentary elections in nearly a decade.
Over a hundred observers from European Union countries, as well as Norway and Sweden, will be working during the elections, according to the EU Election Observation Mission in Lebanon.
The observers were invited by the Lebanese government to monitor and assess the voting scheduled for Sunday.
Elena Valenciano, Lebanon chief observer for the mission, said political parties in Lebanon are “really committed to have good elections.”
More than 500 candidates are competing in 15 electoral districts for 128 seats.
They include a record number of women and civil society activists hoping to challenge established political parties and politicians.


Tunisia court blocks closure of factory blamed for pollution

Updated 6 sec ago
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Tunisia court blocks closure of factory blamed for pollution

  • The facility in the city of Gabes emits sulfur gases, nitrogen and fluorine
  • “The court ruled that there was no sufficient proof of harm,” Adouni said

TUNIS: A Tunisian court on Thursday rejected demands to suspend operations at a fertilizer factory, a lawyer told AFP, after thousands of protesters blamed the plant for a rise in health problems.
The facility in the city of Gabes emits sulfur gases, nitrogen and fluorine, according to an audit last July for the African Development Bank, which reported “major non-compliance” on air and marine pollution.
Mounir Adouni, head of the Gabes bar association that launched the legal action, said Thursday’s decision was an emergency ruling and a final verdict was pending.
“The court ruled that there was no sufficient proof of harm, saying allegations of pollution lacked technical and scientific evidence,” Adouni said.
Locals in Gabes have for years rallied against the phosphate-processing factory, which makes fertilizers mainly for export.
The bar association lodged its complaint after thousands protested against the plant in October, blaming it for an increase in health problems in the local community.
This month local campaign group Stop Pollution said 12 of its members had been sentenced to a year in prison over a 2020 protest at the plant.
Adouni said the bar will file an appeal on Friday because no date had been set for a hearing on a final ruling.
Despite a 2017 promise to gradually shut the plant down, authorities last year said they were ramping up production.
Taking advantage of rising prices for fertilizer on global markets, Tunisia now wants its output to increase more than fourfold by 2030.
The African Development Bank last month said it would provide Tunisia with $110 million to “support the environmental upgrading and rehabilitation” of the factory.
President Kais Saied has long vowed to revive Tunisia’s phosphate sector, hindered by years of underinvestment and unrest, calling it a “pillar of the national economy.”