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| An election worker carries a balloting box at a polling station in Damascus, Syria, June 3, 2014. Syria on Tuesday kicks off its presidential election, in which eligible voters will cast their ballots for the country's three presidential candidates, including incumbent President Bashar al-Assad. (Xinhua/Bassem Tellawi) |
DAMASCUS, June 3 -- Syria's one-day presidential election started Tuesday, with more than 15 million eligible and registered Syrian voters expected to cast their ballots for the country's three presidential contenders, including incumbent President Bashar al-Assad.
The Interior Ministry said 9,610 polling stations are available across the country amid reports that the government has also set up ballot boxes in displacement shelters to allow thousands of displaced Syrians to participate in the voting process.
The vote is taking place despite rejection by the opposition and their Western backers, who have dismissed the poll as a "farce".
Opposition rebels have even threatened in online statements to unleash attacks against polling stations to disrupt the process.
"We announce the commencement of targeting the security headquarters, the polling stations, their committees and members as of Tuesday, June 3, and thus we ask the citizens to stay away from the mentioned areas," one statement read.
"We declare Damascus a military zone until the end of the filthy elections," another said, warning people to stay away from polling stations considered by rebels as "legitimate targets."
On Monday, rebels in Damascus suburbs fired several mortar shells that almost hit security headquarters. The mortars landed near the Faculty of Art of the Damascus University and in many other residential areas, causing injuries and property losses.
Amid the threats, the Syrian government seems to have taken all necessary measures to secure the voting process. Reports say public transportation is free on Tuesday to serve those who want to reach polling stations.
Checkpoints at Damascus' entrances have further tightened inspection measures, while the authorities have secured government establishments and areas where polling stations and booths are set up.
The Interior Ministry said on Monday that it was taking all required procedures to facilitate citizens traveling to and from city centers for the vote.
Meanwhile, Syria's state-run news agency SANA said delegations of expat Syrians are arriving in Syria to participate in the vote. Those expats could not cast their ballots during the overseas polling in late May because Syrian embassies in their living countries were banned to hold the voting.
Aside from the Syrians, parliamentarian delegations from "friendly countries" -- Iran, Russia, Brazil, and Democratic People's Republic of Korea -- have also started to arrive to observe the voting at the invitation of the Syrian parliament, according to SANA.
The three presidential candidates -- incumbent President al-Assad, former minister Hassan al-Nouri and lawmaker Maher Hajjar -- have put forth their electoral platforms that carry nearly the same political headlines with different visions on how to rescue the collapsed economy.
The election is the first held in half a century. Previously, there were only referendums to support Assad or his late father Hafez al-Assad who was in office from 1971 to 2000.
In 2007, the junior Assad won another seven-year term of office with 97 percent of the vote in a nationwide referendum on his leadership, in which he was the only candidate.
Tuesday's poll, which lasts from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. local time, takes place at roughly all governmental establishments and ministries and also in the capital's hotels and booths set up by the government in every alley in Damascus to facilitate the voting.
In al-Mazzeh Sheikh Sa'ad neighborhood alone, at least 20 polling stations and booths are open to receive voters.
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