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Can election observers boost confidence among Palestinian voters?

The Palestinian Central Elections Commission is registering local and international monitors for October's municipal elections, a move favored by the Palestinian factions in light of the Fatah-Hamas division.
GAZA CITY, GAZA STRIP - JANUARY 25: A member of a European Union mission to observe the parliamentary elections in the West Bank and Gaza monitor Palestinians  as they vote for the Palestinian legislative candidates at a polling station in the U.N. school Alef which is being used as an election station on January 25 2006, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip.The newly elected Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) will be expanded, and half of the seats will be allotted by proportional representation of all parties that
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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — The local elections scheduled for Oct. 8 in Gaza and the West Bank — the first following the Hamas-Fatah split in June 2007 and including the majority of the factions — has created a buzz on the Palestinian street. The Central Elections Commission announced in a July 14 statement on its website that it had begun receiving requests for accreditation by potential election observers. Given the great interest in and importance of these elections, the commission had issued a call for observers July 10. The deadline for applications is Oct. 1.

Hisham Kahil, executive director of the elections commission, told Al-Monitor that the commission had officially called on several international organizations, embassies, consulates and diplomatic missions to Palestine to take part in supervision and monitoring. He said the US-based Carter Center, the National Democratic Institute and the Jordanian government had agreed to supervise the elections. He anticipates that the commission will be receiving additional volunteers in the upcoming days.

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