The Free Press Journal

Saudi has detained Hariri: Lebanon Prez

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Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun on Wednesday accused Saudi Arabia of having “detained” Prime Minister Saad Hariri, who announced his resignatio­n in a statement from the kingdom earlier this month, reports AFP.

“Nothing justifies the failure of Prime Minister Saad Hariri to return for 12 days, therefore we consider him to be held and detained, contrary to the Vienna Convention,” Aoun said in a tweet on the official Lebanese presidency account.

Speculatio­n has swirled about the circumstan­ces of Hariri’s resignatio­n since his surprise announceme­nt on November 4, in a statement read on Saudi Arabia’s Al-Arabiya television station.

There have been rumours that the prime minister, who is a Saudi citizen and grew up in the kingdom, had been detained along with dozens of Saudis caught up in an arrest campaign that Riyadh says is part of its anti-corruption efforts.

Hariri, who has long been close to Saudi authoritie­s, has sought to quell the rumours, insisting in an interview with his party’s television station over the weekend that he had freedom of movement and would return to Lebanon in the coming days.

But he has yet to show any signs of coming home, and statements from France and other countries have fuelled speculatio­n that he is being held in Saudi Arabia.

In his first tweet in several days, Hariri on Tuesday once again denied the rumours he was being detained.

“Guys, I am perfectly fine, and God willing I will return in the coming days. Let’s calm down,” he wrote.

Aoun has yet to officially accept Hariri’s resignatio­n, and has said he will not do so before meeting with the premier in person in Lebanon.

“No decision can be made on a resignatio­n from abroad,” he reiterated in a tweet on the presidency’s account on Wednesday.

“He should return to Lebanon to present his resignatio­n or withdraw it, or to discuss the reasons for it and how to address them,” Aoun added.

“We cannot extend this wait and lose time, we cannot stop state affairs,” he added.

He sought however to calm fears about Lebanon’s stability in the face of the political crisis.

“Do not be afraid, whether economical­ly, financiall­y or in terms of security,” he wrote.

“The country is safe and the financial markets are functionin­g properly.”

 ??  ?? A poster for Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri at a traffic signal in Beirut's Hamra street on Wednesday.
A poster for Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri at a traffic signal in Beirut's Hamra street on Wednesday.

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