Assad Supporters Turn Out in Lebanon as Syrian Expats Vote

This version of Assad Supporters Turn Out Lebanon Syrian Expats Vote N116081 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

Expatriate voting was to take place in Syrian embassies and consulates abroad where the staff has not defected to the opposition.
Get more newsAssad Supporters Turn Out Lebanon Syrian Expats Vote N116081 - Breaking News | NBC News Cloneon

BEIRUT - Thousands of Syrians flocked to their embassy in Lebanon as expat voting started Wednesday ahead of Syria's June 3 presidential election, a vote that is widely expected to give Bashar Assad a third seven-year term in office.

The Syrian opposition and its Western allies have denounced the election as a sham designed to lend Assad a veneer of electoral legitimacy.

Image: Syrian citizens who live in Lebanon shout slogans and carry a portrait of Syrian President Bashar Assad
Syrian citizens who live in Lebanon shout slogans and carry a portrait of Syrian President Bashar Assad, as they walk towards to the Syrian embassy to ballot their vote for their presidential elections, in Baabda, east of Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday May 28, 2014. Thousands are flocking to the Syrian embassy in Lebanon as expat voting starts ahead of Syria's June 3 presidential election.Hussein Malla / AP

The government in Damascus, meanwhile, has touted the vote as the political solution to the three-year-long conflict that began as an uprising against Assad's rule.

Expatriate voting was to take place in Syrian embassies and consulates abroad where the staff has not defected to the opposition. Some European countries have said they will not allow Syrian expatriate voting to be held in their capitals.

Polls would be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. but Syrian Ambassador in Beirut Ali Abdel-Karim Ali said voting could be extended further into the evening.

The crowd snarled traffic as Assad supporters lined up in the street outside the embassy in the southeastern Beirut neighborhood of Yarze.

Many said they came to vote and show their support for Assad, including groups of men, women and children who carried Assad's photos and waved Syrian flags.

"With our souls, with our blood, we will sacrifice for you, Bashar," they chanted.

There are about 1.1 million Syrians who live in Lebanon as refugees. Many among the refugees and opposition supporters abroad are expected to boycott the vote. The two other candidates in the race are mostly symbolic contenders and little known figures.

The government in Damascus also touts the June 3 election as a referendum on Assad's violent crushing of the armed rebellion that began as an uprising against his rule.

The conflict, now in its fourth year, has killed over 162,000 people and displaced one-third of Syria's prewar population of 23 million.

- The Associated Press
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