Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hariri To Hold Another Round Of FPM Negotiations

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

  • Hariri To Hold Another Round Of FPM Negotiations

    HARIRI TO HOLD ANOTHER ROUND OF FPM NEGOTIATIONS
    Elias Sakr

    Daily Star
    Lebanon
    September 29, 2009

    BEIRUT: No progress was made on cabinet formation front on Monday,
    as opposition and majority groups clung to their stances as
    Premier-designate Saad Hariri resumed his deliberations with
    parliamentary blocs.

    As part of his efforts to break the cabinet deadlock, Hariri is
    expected to hold another round of deliberations with a delegation of
    the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) headed by MP Michel Aoun on Thursday
    as well as the Lebanese Forces (LF) and the Phalange Party.

    Hariri met at Parliament on Monday with the Armenian Tashnaq party
    bloc, al-Jamaa al-Islamyia MP Imad Hout and independent MP Boutros
    Harb.

    After the meeting, the Tashnaq party stressed its support for Hariri as
    well as the necessity to form a national-unity cabinet that guarantees
    partnership given the upcoming challenges.

    Meanwhile, opposition parties including Hizbullah and Amal Movement
    reiterated their support for the resumption of negotiations over the
    cabinet based on the 15-10-5 formula.

    Conversely, the LF stressed Monday that the legitimacy of any cabinet
    should be evaluated according to the Constitution, a reference
    to Hizbullah's criticism of LF head Samir Geagea's call to form a
    majority cabinet.

    Hizbullah's Loyalty to Resistance bloc chief MP Mohammad Raad stressed
    on Monday that the foundations of a national-unity cabinet were in
    place and awaited the premier-designate to coordinate the distribution
    of portfolios and candidates.

    "The fundamentals of a national-unity cabinet are available and
    only lack the premier-designate's will to creatively manage the
    distribution of portfolios and names to bring to light a government
    that would save Lebanon ahead of upcoming challenges," Raad said.

    Raad reiterated his party's support for the 15-10-5 formula, adding
    that given the current domestic challenges and the ongoing Israeli
    threats, the structure was the best to guarantee national Amal Movement
    MP Ali Hassan Khalil called on Monday to form a national unity cabinet
    based on the 15-10-5 formula, adding that Lebanon should seize the
    opportunity that emerged as a result of Syrian-Saudi rapprochement.

    The Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported on Monday that Saudi King
    Abdullah bin Abdel -Aziz received on Sunday an undisclosed invitation
    from Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    The agency added that Syrian Information Minister Mohsen Bilal
    delivered the message to Saudi Information and Culture Minister
    Abdel-Aziz Khoja.

    "The recent inter Arab contacts created a new dynamic; we should
    seize the opportunity... and take responsibility for the cabinet's
    formation rather than toss the burden on foreign powers with regard
    to details linked to the distribution of portfolios," Khalil said.

    Khalil praised President Michel Sleiman's insistence to form a
    national-unity cabinet while he slammed statements by certain political
    groups contradicting the principles of partnership and coexistence.

    Also, Liberation and Development bloc MP Ali Bazzi said Assad's
    visit to Saudi Arabia had a positive impact on inter-Arab ties,
    which reflected positively on Lebanon and the region.

    "However, this positive atmosphere does not liberate the Lebanese from
    their responsibility to work in order to re-establish warm relations
    among each other," Bazzi added.

    Echoing Geagea, Parliament Deputy Speaker and Future Movement MP Farid
    Makari called on Sleiman and Hariri to from a cabinet in accordance
    with constitutional norms if negotiations to reach an agreement over
    a national-unity government failed.

    In a speech on Saturday, Geagea urged Hariri and the president to
    form a majority cabinet if the opposition does not relinquish its
    conditions concerning the government.

    "The time has come to reach a conclusion; if it turns out that we
    would hit a deadlock and another round of stalled deliberations,
    then the premier-designate along with the president should form a
    cabinet in accordance with constitutional n rom being a hostage to
    obstruction," Makari said.

    In response to Hizbullah's criticism, LF MP Antoine Zahra stressed on
    Monday that the legitimacy of any government or power in Lebanon should
    be evaluated based the Constitution and the implementation of its laws.

    "Geagea's statement was an attempt to prevent the ongoing provoked
    series of crisis for five consecutive years including the obstruction
    of presidential elections and the cabinet's formation which threatens
    to abolish the Constitution and thus Lebanon's presence and entity,"
    Zahra added.

    LF ally the Phalange Party expressed hope on Monday that the minority
    transform its talk about the positive atmosphere with regard to the
    cabinet formation into deeds so as to facilitate the process. Following
    a meeting of the party's politburo, the Phalange issued a statement
    calling on Hariri to form a cabinet that reflects the outcome of the
    June 7 elections and the Phalange's true representational size.

    The statement also denied that the Phalange bloc tackled during talks
    with Hariri the expected portfolios to be allotted to the party or
    the candidates to be nominated.

    In other news, the Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu al-Gheit said
    in remarks published in Ash-Sharq al-Awsat on Monday that his country
    supported the designation of Hariri for the post of premier-designate
    while denying claims saying otherwise.

    "Claims that Egypt does not want Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri
    to form a cabinet in Lebanon are inaccurate," Abu al-Gheit said, adding
    that "we expressed back then our belief that he would face obstacles."

    Abu al-Gheit added that foreign obstacles hampered the formation of the
    government as he stressed that Saudi Arabia plays a very supportive
    role while Egypt was keen to see a government formed as soon as
    possible. The Egyptian foreign minister hinted to a significant
    Iranian influence in Lebanon, adding that Syria has also historic
    and strategic interests in Lebanon.

    Lebanese regime 'on its deathbed' says ian paper

    BEIRUT: Lebanon's political regime in its current shape is no longer
    viable, the Syrian state-run newspaper Tishrin reported in remarks
    published on Monday.

    The paper added that the Lebanese regime was on its "deathbed" and
    needed radical changes to revive it.

    "How can we claim that a sectarian regime is a democratic one,
    if loyalty to religions exceeded loyalty to the nation; thus the
    country faces a regime crisis rather than a government crisis,"
    the report said. - The Daily Star
Working...
X