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90 Percent Turn Out for Tunisian Election
TUNIS, Tunisia -- Tunisia's first popular elections Sunday drew a solid turnout -- estimated at more than 90 percent of registered voters -- officials said.
Color me blue ... voters leave a polling station in Tunis. "People's faces sometimes tell more than the whole procedure. There's serenity and joy at the same time," Gabriele Albertini, head of the European Parliament delegation, said. "A few times I saw people -- young and not so young -- with the tears in their eyes." (Photo: AFP)
Euronews said there were long lines of people outside almost all polling stations across Tunisia waiting to cast their votes to elect an interim assembly to run the country and draft a new constitution. About 4.1 million people had registered to vote out of more than 7 million who were eligible in the nation of about 10.4 million people.
The people of Tunisia toppled President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, becoming among the first in the region to cast off longtime rulers in what has become known as the Arab Spring.
Euronews said the moderate Islamic Ennahda party was expected to win a plurality of the 218 seats but without a majority will need to form a coalition. Results are expected to be released Tuesday.
Tunisia Live reported the top elections official, Kamel Jendoubi, said while the polling went smoothly without major problems or interruption, there were some electoral infractions.
"We have information about meetings of large number of people in front of voting places shouting slogans," he said, adding "short messages were sent by mobile phones" and there had been some "soft intimidation efforts to influence voters."
None of the violations were serious enough to impact the final results, however.
"People's faces sometimes tell more than the whole procedure. There's serenity and joy at the same time," Gabriele Albertini, head of the European Parliament delegation, said. "A few times I saw people -- young and not so young -- with the tears in their eyes."
U.S. President Barack Obama congratulated Tunisians, calling the elections "an important step forward."
"The United States reaffirms its commitment to the Tunisian people as they move toward a democratic future that offers dignity, justice, freedom of expression, and greater economic opportunity for all," he said in a statement.
Marwen Hamadan, a 23-year-old architecture student, said he had voted for Communist candidates.
"I don't want to live with Islamic ideology," he said. "Tunisia is a diverse civilization, it is a mix of political and religious opinions. [Ennahda] will be a dictatorship in another form -- before it was a political one and I worry that Ennadha would impose a religious one."
Tunisia was one of the first Muslim countries to rebel against religious and autocratic rule in the political wave that began in January. The unrest led to further demonstrations in Syria, Yemen, Bahrain and most recently in neighboring Libya, where dissent evolved into civil war and saw ousted dictator Moammar Gadhafi killed.
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Show AllTunisia, not having its Government with the Aid of NATO and is policy of "slaughter all that stand against whom we do not support" has the best chance of evolving towards Democracy.
In Libya, the Government has announced the new Libyan Government will be a Theocracy and operate under the principle of Shariah Law.
That dissent in Libya was funded by the western Government. Its rebels were armed by them and encouraged to rise up. Gadhafi was murdered by this mob.
NATO picked the biggest crop of thugs they could find in that country and helped them take power. The nations of NATO are all scrambling to have their own Corporations take over that Countries resources as its new Government is said to be "In its debt".
Had NATO aided the Tunisians, all those Communist candidates would have been targeted with air strikes,
The people of Tunisia hope to get the Government THEY want. Let us hope that becomes the case. The people of Libya got the Government that Britain , France and Canada and the USA wanted them to have. The Libyans really had no choice.