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Lebanese violence fears as leaders fail to elect president

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Published Date: 24 November 2007
LEBANON'S parliament failed yesterday to grasp its last chance to elect a head of state before pro-Syrian president Emile Lahoud leaves office at midnight, creating a vacuum that many fear could lead to violence.
Parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri, a Shiite opposition leader, put off the vote for a fifth time because rival factions were deadlocked. He delayed the session for a week.

The delay means the presidency, always held by a Maronite Christian under
Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system, will be vacant for at least a week. Unless a consensus candidate emerges soon, the country could end up saddled with competing administrations as at the end of its 1975-90 civil war.

Prime minister Fouad Siniora's western-backed cabinet will assume presidential powers until a new head of state is elected, even though the opposition challenges its legitimacy.

Mr Lahoud, who has sworn not to hand over to the Siniora cabinet, was due to make a statement shortly before leaving office. He could entrust Lebanon's security to the army or take more drastic options that the government would reject.

French-led mediation efforts failed to resolve a dispute over the presidency which reflects a regional struggle pitting Washington against Syria and Iran, both allies of Hezbollah.

The US and its local allies blame Syria for the deadlock. Hezbollah and its Christian partners say the majority bloc wants to keep them from their rightful share of power. They accuse Washington of seeking to control Lebanon.

More than 100 lawmakers from both camps went to parliament in downtown Beirut, but opposition MPs did not enter the assembly chamber in line with a boycott declared a day earlier.

Before announcing the delay, Mr Berri held separate meetings with majority leaders Saad al-Hariri and Walid Jumblatt, a sign the rival camps have not yet burned their bridges. "We are for consensus and we will remain for consensus," Mr Hariri said.



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  • Last Updated: 23 November 2007 11:49 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Middle East conflict
 
1

bill2,

24/11/2007 09:24:12

"Hezbollah and its Christian partners say the majority bloc wants to keep them from their rightful share of power. They accuse Washington of seeking to control Lebanon."

Washington aka Israel.

2

Homo Sapiens,

24/11/2007 12:31:37

Isn't this rich - Bill2 - in his perverse thinking found a way for blaming on Israel and the USA the efforts by Hizzbullah, Iran and Syria to overthrow the government of a soverign state. How blind and filled with anti-semitism hatred can one be? You are a laughable virulent anti-semite, anti-jew, and people like you should have perished off this earth with the Nazis!

3

bill2,

24/11/2007 14:39:33

2. Homo

"efforts by Hizzbullah, Iran and Syria to overthrow the government"

Which efforts would these be then?

Israel and the USA between them have wrecked Lebanon, and you have the temerity to support them?

Whilst not being either anti-Jew or anti-semite, I am anti-Nazi, and regrettably I see their characteristics in both the current Israeli and US administrations.

4

Pictus,

Sen. Batson D. Belfry 24/11/2007 15:22:53

Poor Lebanon! Drifting rudderless on the pitiless sea of human affairs without a President.

Never a concern in a sensible, stable constitutional monarchy. No prime minister? Not to worry! There'll be another along soon.

5

Lynne,

USA 25/11/2007 02:05:03

bill2..reread your own posts...and see how ludicrous they are. Hezbollah ...Hezbollah fighting the proxy war for Iran..Assassinating Lebanon's Prime Minster.
But, seeing as from who this post comes...can't expect anything different.

Just do all of us one favor...STOP LYING.

6

Lynne,

USA 25/11/2007 02:51:05

Sorry...I meant Syria....just tired I guess.. spent from an emergency.

7

bill2,

25/11/2007 08:20:22

5. Lynne

Hezbollah is all that Lebanon has to defend itself Israel and the USA.

I quite understand why you want to get rid of them.

8

Home_Sweet_Home,

Who Cares 25/11/2007 12:41:00

#7 Billy

Gee, Hezbollah invades Israel, starts a war and gets thousands of Lebanese killed and their infrastructure destroyed. Their leader Nasrallah says he made a mistake in doing so.

If that's 'defending' Lebanon, they do a pretty good job.

But if they kill Jews, they must be the 'good guys', huh?

9

bill2,

25/11/2007 13:01:48

8. Home

You know and I know that the 12 July capture of two Israeli soldiers was just an excuse for the brutal onslaught by Israel on the Lebanon.

Don't attempt to defend Israel's inhumanitarian, excessive, disproportionate and indiscriminate savagery.

10

Home_Sweet_Home,

Who Cares 25/11/2007 13:22:55

#9 Bill

Hezbollah attacked across the international border and started a war.

Heres a safety tip for you and your Jew killing friends

Dont like war?
Dont start one!

11

Home_Sweet_Home,

Who Cares 25/11/2007 13:29:54

The leader of Hezbollah admits he started the war
And he admits it was a mistake.

Poor Bill, even your firends dont agree with you

Report: Nasrallah says attacking Israel may have been a mistake

By Jack Khoury, Haaretz Correspondent

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah admitted that the group's attack against Israeli soldiers July 12 may have been a mistake, an Egyptian human rights activist said Saturday.


http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/821321.html

12

Lynne,

USA 25/11/2007 15:22:43

HSH..you can prove it, you can show quotes, you can even recite the Qu'ran for bill2...makes know difference..he will never see the light of the truth about Hezbollah, Hamas, Iraq insurgents, Syria, Iran..or anything else. To put it mildly...he has a closed mind.

13

bill2,

25/11/2007 18:41:08

12. Lynne

"he has a closed mind"

You bet!

I know the truth, you don't.

14

Home_Sweet_Home,

Who Cares 25/11/2007 20:53:40

Thats right Bill.

The TRUTH speaks to you and only you.
How is that rubber room working out for ya?

15

Lynne,

USA 25/11/2007 23:28:28

no..bill2..this is why
Hezbollah seeks anti-Israel leader
Iran-linked group blames America for nation's inability to elect a president
The Associated Press
updated 5:46 p.m. ET, Sun., Nov. 25, 2007
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Iran-backed Hezbollah on Sunday blamed U.S. interference for the Lebanese parliament’s inability to elect a president and added a new condition for choosing the next head of state: The leader must support the powerful Shiite Muslim group’s fight against Israel.
Hezbollah’s demand is bound to further complicate efforts to elect a new president to replace Emile Lahoud, who stepped down midnight Friday, plunging the crisis-ridden country into a dangerous power vacuum after rival factions failed to agree on a successor.
“We want a president who believes in national participation and in the right to defend one’s land and protect its people,” Hezbollah’s deputy leader, Sheik Naim Kassem, said in a speech in south Beirut.

16

bill2,

26/11/2007 08:49:26

15. Lynne

“We want a president who believes in national participation and in the right to defend one’s land and protect its people,”

Sounds good to me.

We could do with one of those in the UK and I'm sure you could too.

17

Lynne,

USA 26/11/2007 22:51:31

This is the paragraph before bill2's statement.

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Iran-backed Hezbollah on Sunday blamed U.S. interference for the Lebanese parliament’s inability to elect a president and added a new condition for choosing the next head of state: The leader must support the powerful Shiite Muslim group’s fight against Israel.
Hezbollah’s demand is bound to further complicate efforts to elect a new president to replace Emile Lahoud, who stepped down midnight Friday, plunging the crisis-ridden country into a dangerous power vacuum after rival factions failed to agree on a successor.

18

Lynne,

USA 26/11/2007 22:52:00

bill2...now it is half truths you resort to.

19

bill2,

27/11/2007 09:52:25

18. Lynne

I'll correct that.

You need a president who believes in national participation and in the right to defend one’s land and protect its people.

We have a Queen who believes in that; now we need a Prime Minister who believes the same.


 

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