Bahrain elects more women in parliament vote without opposition
The Hindu
More than 330 candidates, including a record 73 women, ran for a seat on the council of representatives.
Bahrain has elected a record eight women and many first-time lawmakers to its 40-seat parliament, according to results announced Sunday of this week's polls held without opposition candidates.
The official Bahrain News Agency published the list of 34 candidates who won seats in the second round of parliamentary elections on Saturday, adding to six confirmed after a first round on November 12.
Two major opposition groups, the Shiite Al-Wefaq and the secular Waad, were prevented from presenting candidates. These parties were dissolved in 2016 and 2017 respectively.
Amnesty International said ahead of the poll that the elections were taking place in an "environment of political repression".
An election official in the small Gulf kingdom pushed back against the criticism.
"Only the voices of the Bahraini voters are heard, and all other voices are neither heeded nor influential," Nawaf Abdullah Hamzah, director of the election process, was quoted as saying Saturday by the official news agency.
More than 330 candidates, including a record 73 women, ran for a seat on the council of representatives – the lower house of parliament that advises King Hamad, who has ruled since his father died in March 1999.