The Phnom Penh Post

Lebanon seeks Saudi explanatio­n

- Tony Gamal-Gabriel

LEBANON president urged Saudi Arabia on Saturday to explain why Saad Hariri had not returned since his surprise resignatio­n as prime minister a week ago. Hariri announced on November 4 in a televised statement from Riyadh that he would be stepping down from the post, sending shock waves through Lebanese politics. The premier has yet to return to Lebanon and rumours have swirled that he is being held in Saudi Arabia against his will.

President Michel Aoun on Saturday called on the kingdom to “clarify the reasons that have prevented the return of PM Hariri to Lebanon to be among his people and supporters”.

“The obscurity surroundin­g the condition of PM Saad Hariri since his resignatio­n a week ago means that all positions and actions declared by him or attributed to him do not reflect the truth,” Aoun added. “They are instead a result of the ambiguous and obscure conditions [under which] PM Hariri is living in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”

Aoun on Saturday spoke by phone to French President Emmanuel Macron on the “latest developmen­ts” around Hariri’s resignatio­n, Lebanon’s presidency said in a statement.

The Lebanese head of state has yet to formally accept Hariri’s resignatio­n and has criticised the circumstan­ces surroundin­g it as “unacceptab­le”.

‘Detained in Saudi Arabia’

On Saturday evening, Hariri attended a reception ceremony at the Riyadh airport for Saudi King Salman who had flown back to the capital from the holy city of Medina, Hariri’s media office.

The emailed statement said Hariri had earlier met in Riyadh with both the British and Turkish envoys to the kingdom.

In his shock announceme­nt, Hariri accused Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah of taking over his country and destabilis­ing the broader region, saying he feared for his life.

His statement prompted fears that Lebanon – dominated by rival camps led by Hariri and Hezbollah – would be caught up in spiralling tensions between Riyadh and Tehran.

Hariri’s week-long absence from Leb- anon has sparked rumours that the expremier – who also holds Saudi nationalit­y – is under de facto house arrest in the kingdom.

“The head of the Lebanese government is detained in Saudi Arabia, he is banned from returning to Lebanon until now,” Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah said in a televised address Friday.

Members of Hariri’s own AlMoustaqb­al party said they had no informatio­n on his fate. And Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil announced on Friday that he was launching a “diplomatic campaign to bring back the head of our government of his own free will”.

Even world powers have appealed for calm and freedom of movement for Hariri. US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Friday described Hariri as “a strong partner” and warned against “any party, within or outside Lebanon, using Lebanon as a venue for proxy conflicts or in any manner contributi­ng to instabilit­y in that country”.

On Friday, a spokesman for France’s Foreign Ministry said: “We wish Mr Saad Hariri to have all his freedom of movement and to be fully able to play the essential role that is his in Lebanon.”

 ?? MOHAMMED AL-HAMMADI/ UNITED ARAB EMIRATES NEWS AGENCY/AFP ?? Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Saad Hariri meeting with Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince at the Al-Shati palace in Abu Dhabi on November 7.
MOHAMMED AL-HAMMADI/ UNITED ARAB EMIRATES NEWS AGENCY/AFP Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Saad Hariri meeting with Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince at the Al-Shati palace in Abu Dhabi on November 7.

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