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Nine Years of Lahoud in Office

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  • Nine Years of Lahoud in Office

    Naharnet, Lebanon
    Beirut, 23 Sep 07, 15:59

    Nine Years of Lahoud in Office

    Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, whose mandate expires
    in November, has insisted on serving his full extended
    term despite pressure from a majority that considers
    him a puppet of neighboring Syria.
    Backed by Damascus and its Lebanese allies, mainly the
    Shiite militant group Hizbullah, he has resisted a
    barrage of calls for his resignation and been snubbed
    for the past two years by most Western states.

    When his term expires on Nov. 24, the 71-year-old
    former army chief, known for a perennial smile and
    year-round suntan which triggers critics to claim that
    he spends most of his time at the beach, will complete
    nine years in office.

    He was elected president in 1998 and had been due to
    step down in 2004, but the country's then powerbroker
    Syria pushed through parliament a controversial
    constitutional amendment extending his term for three
    more years.

    His own Maronite church strongly opposed his
    re-election and the anti-Syrian ruling majority and
    Western officials have since boycotted him.

    He in turn has refused to recognize the legitimacy of
    Prime Minister Fouad Saniora's government following
    the November resignation of six pro-Syrian ministers.

    Lebanon has been in political limbo since the February
    2005 murder of former Premier Rafik Hariri, which
    forced Syria to end its 29-year military presence in
    the country.

    Four top Lebanese generals close to Lahoud have
    already been jailed under the international
    investigation into Hariri's murder in which senior
    Syrian officials have been implicated. Syria denies
    any links with the assassination.

    Born January 12, 1936, Lahoud hails from the mountain
    town of Baabdat, east of Beirut. He comes from a
    Maronite family that has produced cabinet ministers,
    MPs, military men and magistrates.

    His mother and wife are both of Armenian descent and
    he has three children. His eldest son was a member of
    parliament between 2000 and 2005.

    Lahoud entered the political arena after a long
    military career.

    He first enrolled in military school in 1956 and
    became a naval officer in 1959 before earning a
    maritime engineering degree in Britain and completing
    military training in the United States.

    After his return to Lebanon, he was promoted to
    commander in the 1970s and held several senior
    positions at the defense ministry before becoming
    commander-in-chief of the army in November 1989.

    His troops took part in the October 1990 Syrian-led
    military offensive that ended the rebellion of
    then-Prime Minister General Michel Aoun, who was later
    forced into exile in France.

    Ironically, the two men are now in the same opposition
    camp.

    After the end of the 1975-1990 civil war, Lahoud
    succeeded in reuniting and rebuilding the Lebanese
    army, which had splintered during wartime into feuding
    Christian and Muslim factions.

    He gave cautious backing for Hizbullah's fight against
    Israel's occupation of south Lebanon that led to a
    unilateral Israeli withdrawal in May 2000 during his
    first mandate.

    However, he took no steps to assert Lebanese military
    control over the south until an Israeli offensive in
    July-August 2006 forced Hizbullah to end its military
    presence on the borders with the Jewish state.

    Parliament first elected Lahoud as president in
    October 1998. He promised then to establish a state of
    law and to put an end to endemic corruption in public
    life.
    But he was unsuccessful, hampered by the cronyism that
    lies at the root of Lebanese society.(AFP-Naharnet)
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