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Sri Lankans voted on Thursday in local government elections widely seen as a litmus test of the popularity of President Mahinda Rajapakse's hard-line Marxist allies that could affect a fragile peace process.
Polls in and near Tamil Tiger areas across most of the island's north and east have been put back six months on security worries and, with only a handful of frontline areas voting, attention was concentrated on the majority Sinhalese south.
The Marxist JVP backed Rajapakse in last November's presidential election and votes with him in parliament but is contesting local polls separately. Analysts say it wants to increase its control beyond the one council it currently holds.
The JVP, along with the much smaller JHU, a party of Buddhist monks, has long opposed making concessions to the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Keeping JVP support is seen as limiting government options at upcoming peace talks.
The elections commission said around 55 to 60 percent of voters had cast their ballots by the time they closed, slightly lower than at previous local polls. Unlike in some previous years, there was no violence, the commission said.
At the last local polls in 2002, the opposition United National Party, then in power, won almost all councils. JVP took only one. Analysts say the ruling party usually does best and expect the United Peoples' Freedom Alliance, which includes Rajapakse's Sri Lanka Freedom Party, to be the main winner.
Voters said local issues and not the peace process would decide the poll, something analysts says could help the JVP, seen by some as more efficient than the mainstream parties.
Results of the election are due in the early hours of Friday.
If the JVP notably expands its share of the vote, analysts say Rajapakse may face a simple choice - either take a tough line with the LTTE rebels that might cause direct talks next month to collapse, or cut his ties with the Marxists.
A string of suspected rebel attacks in the north and east followed Rajapakse's election, all but destroying a 2002 cease-fire and heightened fears of a return to a two-decade civil war that has killed more than 64,000 people.

Copyright Reuters, 2006

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