Syria will hold its first parliamentary elections on Sunday since the fall of Bashar al-Assad, amid concerns over inclusivity and successive delays.
There will be no direct vote for the People's Assembly, which will be responsible for legislation during a transitional period. Instead, electoral colleges will select representatives for two-thirds of the 210 seats. Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa will appoint the rest.
Long-time former President Assad was ousted by Sharaa's forces 10 months ago after a 13-year civil war.
Authorities say they have postponed the polls for security reasons in two Kurdish-controlled provinces and a third which saw deadly fighting between government forces and Druze militias.
The clashes, in July, marked the latest outbreak of sectarian violence in Syria since Assad's overthrow.
In a speech at the UN General Assembly last week - the first by a Syrian president in 60 years - Sharaa promised to bring to justice everyone responsible for the bloodshed, as well as those who committed atrocities under Assad.
He also pledged that Syria was now rebuilding itself through establishing a new state, building institutions and laws that guarantee the rights of all without exception.
Sunday's polls are being overseen by the Higher Committee for the Syrian People's Assembly Elections, whose 11 members were chosen by the president in June.
The number of seats allocated in each of 60 districts is based on census data collected in 2010 - the year before the country descended into a civil war that killed more than 600,000 people and displaced another 12 million.
The postponement of the elections in the three provinces - Raqqa, Hassakeh and Suweida - means the electoral colleges in only 50 out of 60 districts will be choosing representatives for about 120 seats on Sunday.
There will be more than 1,500 candidates, who must also be electoral college members. Supporters of the former regime or terrorist organisations were barred from membership, as were advocates of secession, division or seeking foreign intervention.
At least 20% of the electoral college members were required to be women. But there were no minimum quotas for female lawmakers, nor for those from the country's many ethnic and religious minorities.
The president will choose representatives for 70 seats from outside the electoral colleges, leading civil society groups to express concerns regarding the potential lack of accountability and representation in the new assembly.
Sharaa defended the electoral process by stating that the transitional period faced significant hurdles in executing popular elections, particularly due to lost documents and a large diaspora of citizens.
The electoral process and the delays reflect ongoing tensions in the regions and suggest a lack of genuine representation, according to opposition voices.
The elections, overshadowed by socio-political crises, are pivotal for Syria's path to recovery in the post-Assad era.