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Libyan men pray at the main mosque in Tripoli, Libya, on Friday. The first election in more than four decades was supposed to forge a new Libya but threatens instead to tear it apart; protesters angry at the distribution of seats in the congress shot down a Libyan air force helicopter delivering ballots here Friday, killing an election official, the United Nations said.

Libyan men pray at the main mosque in Tripoli, Libya, on Friday. The first election in more than four decades was supposed to forge a new Libya but threatens instead to tear it apart; protesters angry at the distribution of seats in the congress shot down a Libyan air force helicopter delivering ballots here Friday, killing an election official, the United Nations said.
Manu Brabo / The Associated Press

Hope, tension ahead of post-Gadhafi vote

By Maggie Michael / The Associated Press
Published: July 07. 2012 4:00AM PST

TRIPOLI, Libya — Fears of militia violence and calls for a boycott threatened Friday to mar Libya’s first nationwide parliamentary election, a milestone on the oil-rich North African nation’s rocky path toward democracy after the ouster of dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

Today’s vote for a 200-member transitional parliament caps a tumultuous nine-month transition toward democracy for the country after a bitter civil war that ended with the capture and killing of Gadhafi in October. Many Libyans had hoped the oil-rich nation of 6 million would quickly thrive and become a magnet for investment, but the country has suffered a virtual collapse in authority that has left formidable challenges. Armed militias still operate independently, and deepening regional and tribal divisions erupt into violence with alarming frequency.

On the eve of the vote, gunmen shot down a helicopter carrying polling materials near the eastern city of Benghazi, the birthplace of the revolution, killing one election worker, said Saleh Darhoub, a spokesman for the ruling National Transitional Council. The crew survived after a crash landing.

Prime Minister Abdurrahim el-Keib vowed the government would ensure a safe vote today, and condemned the election worker’s killing and those who seek to derail the vote.

“Any action aimed at hindering the election process is against the supreme interest of the nation and serves only the remnants of the old regime,” he said next to a screen showing the face of the slain worker. “It is threatening to the future of the revolution and its accomplishments ... and an attempt to stop democracy for which Libyans sacrificed their souls.”

It was not immediately clear who was behind Friday’s shooting, but it was the latest unrest in a messy run-up to the vote that has put a spotlight on some of the major fault lines in the country - the east-west divide, the Islamist versus secularist political struggle.

Many in Libya’s oil-rich east feel slighted by the election laws issued by the National Transitional Council, the body that led the rebel cause during the civil war. The laws allocate the east less than a third of the parliamentary seats, with the rest going to the western region that includes Tripoli and the sparsely-settled desert south.

There are four major parties in the race, ranging from the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood on one end of the spectrum to a secular-minded party led by a Western-educated former rebel prime minister on the other. Flush with money, the Brotherhood’s Justice and Construction party has led one of the best organized and most visible election campaigns.

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