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By Sonja Pace
Jerusalem
25 January 2006
Polls have closed across Gaza and the occupied West Bank and the vote count has begun, after landmark1 Palestinian elections. Indications are the militant2 Islamic group Hamas looks set to gain a major share, right behind the mainstream3 Fatah faction4.
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Palestinian voters arrive at poll station to cast their votes in Gaza city, Jan. 25, 2006
Candidates from across the political spectrum5 are vying6 for seats in the 132-member Palestinian Legislative7 Council.
Election officials say over 70 percent of the more than one million eligible8 voters turned out despite rain and cold winds to cast their ballots9 at more than 1,000 polling stations.
Palestinian journalist Khalil Assali tells VOA from Ramallah that he witnessed a strong sense of excitement among voters.
"People, they just want to go to and vote. It seems that for them, this is something they have to be a part of. So, it is as a lot of Palestinians keep saying that today [Wednesday] is a Palestinian wedding party, meaning that everybody is celebrating, everybody is there. This is really what I've seen," he said.
A strong Hamas showing would indicate the group's call for change and reform clearly resonated with many voters, who were disappointed with the long-time rule of Fatah - a party tainted10 by allegations of mismanagement and widespread corruption11.
This election was marked by unprecedented12 competition and whatever the final results, Fatah's monopoly on power has been broken and Hamas is entering the political arena13 as a force to be reckoned with.
While many Palestinians say Hamas's participation14 in the political process is a good sign for democracy, others fear that the Islamic group could try to impose its fundamentalist views on the entire population.
The election is also being watched closely in Israel and the United States, both of whom consider Hamas a terrorist organization.
Israel says it will not negotiate with Hamas.
In Washington, the Bush administration welcomed Wednesday's elections, but reaffirmed it would not deal with the radical15 Islamic group Hamas.
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