Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Aoun Insists Son-In-Law Must Get Telecoms Post

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Aoun Insists Son-In-Law Must Get Telecoms Post

    AOUN INSISTS SON-IN-LAW MUST GET TELECOMS POST
    Mitchell Prothero, [email protected]

    The National
    August 17. 2009 10:51PM UAE

    BEIRUT // An impasse over the formation of Lebanon's new cabinet turned
    ugly and personal yesterday as a key opposition leader declared that a
    partial defection from the majority alliance had rendered the coalition
    illegitimate and charged his opponents with making personal attacks.

    Michel Aoun told reporters in a press conference that the attacks on
    the former telecommunications minister, Jibran Bassil, by the majority
    were personal and that his son-in-law should be returned to his post.

    The majority alliance, led by the prime minister designate, Saad
    Hariri, has refused to accept Mr Bassil for any cabinet position
    because they want their own candidates to run the most lucrative
    ministry in Lebanon. Mr Hariri's bloc, known as "March 14", also
    claims that Mr Bassil's loss in the parliamentary elections should
    disqualify him from such a high-profile ministry.

    "I am proud of him [Bassil] as an [party] activist since 1999, as my
    son-in-law and as a minister," Mr Aoun told a press conference at his
    home north of Beirut, arguing that attacks on Mr Bassil's record as
    minister are baseless.

    "If they criticise him, then they are criticising me," said Mr Aoun,
    who further claimed that the former minister's time in office "put
    an end to stealing and stopped the mafia within the telecom ministry".

    Mr Aoun appeared furious about recent claims by March 14 supporters
    that Mr Bassil is linked to an internet service provider in the Barouk
    region of Lebanon that appears to have been compromised by Israeli
    intelligence gathering. The owner of the accused company is a top
    opposition official in the Armenian Tashnaq party, which is an ally
    of Mr Aoun's party.

    Mr Aoun denounced Mr Hariri's efforts to form a cabinet with an
    allocation of seats designed to allow the opposition the right to
    veto major legislation. The Hizbollah-led opposition insisted on
    a power-sharing agreement that allocates 15 cabinet seats to the
    majority, ten to the opposition and five independent ministers loyal
    to the president, Michel Suleiman. But in the wake of Druze leader
    Walid Jumblatt's decision to withdraw from the March 14 alliance,
    Mr Aoun has claimed that the formula is no longer acceptable.

    "You do the math, and you will see that the formula has become
    12-10-5-3," Mr Aoun said, with the last three seats going to Mr
    Jumblatt, who has repeatedly denied he is joining the opposition.

    Efforts by Mr Hariri to resolve a disagreement that could quickly
    turn into a feud have included an invitation to Mr Aoun to meet for
    a lunch, but the personal attacks on Mr Bassil seem to have left the
    former army chief of staff in no mood for reconciliation.

    On Monday, Mr Aoun said he would not meet with Mr Hariri until the
    latter "stops his crazy [supporters] from attacking me".

    Although they are nominally in the same opposition alliance, Hizbollah
    appears to have solidified its cabinet positions and seems to have
    little enthusiasm for supporting Mr Aoun in his battle with Mr Hariri,
    according to a supporter of Mr Hariri.

    Mustafa Alloush, a former MP, said that there was no disagreement
    with Hizbollah or its allies, the Amal Movement, over the make-up
    of the cabinet but that the fight with Mr Aoun was likely to scuttle
    the chances of a government being formed in the immediate future.

    "There will be no government formation any time soon, not even after
    Ramadan," he told The National.

    "The real problem is Jibran Bassil," he added. "Aoun is impeding
    the cabinet formation because he insists on the reappointment of his
    son-in-law, [the former] telecommunications minister Jibran Bassil
    without anyone attacking him for it."

    "The national and personal issues are one in the same," he
    added. "Nobody was attacking Aoun. We were just describing the
    situation. All that we were saying was that the cabinet formation is
    impeded because he wants his son-in-law to be reappointed as minister,
    and his speech today confirmed this reality."
Working...
X