Arab Times

Hariri to Paris

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PARIS, Nov 16, (AP): Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri has accepted an invitation to come to France after his surprise resignatio­n from Saudi Arabia nearly two weeks ago that stunned Lebanon and rattled the region, the French president’s office announced on Thursday.

An official in President Emmanuel Macron’s office said Hariri is expected in France in the coming days. The official was not authorized to be publicly named.

Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun said Hariri and his family will arrive on Saturday in France, “where he will rest for a few days” before returning to Beirut to make “a decision regarding the resignatio­n.” Aoun’s statement was carried by state-run National News Agency.

Earlier Thursday, Aoun welcomed Hariri’s decision to accept the French invitation, saying he hoped it “opened the door for a resolution” of the crisis.

“I wait for the return of President (of the council of ministers) Hariri to decide the next move regarding the government,” Aoun said during a meeting with journalist­s. The comments were published on his official Twitter account.

Aoun has refused to accept Hariri’s resignatio­n and accused the Saudis of holding him against his will. In his strongest statements yet about the crisis, Aoun said Wednesday there was no reason for the prime minister not to return to Lebanon.

In Germany, Lebanon’s Foreign Minister Gibran Bassil, on a European tour over the crisis, told reporters that “our concern is that he (Hariri) returns and takes the decision that he wants.”

Meanwhile, in Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said the kingdom “rejected” allegation­s that it is holding Hariri against his will.

“The accusation that the kingdom would hold a prime minister or a former prime minister is not true, especially a political ally like Hariri,” alJubeir said during a press conference with his French counterpar­t Jean-Yves Le Drian who is visiting Saudi Arabia.

Le Drian later met with Hariri. A Saudi-owned TV station showed them chatting in the Lebanese leader’s home in Riyadh without giving details about the meeting. Hariri is a dual LebaneseSa­udi national and has several homes in the kingdom, where his immediate family also lives.

“I don’t know the source of these accusation­s. But they are rejected and are baseless and untrue,” al-Jubeir said.

Al-Jubeir said Hariri is in Saudi Arabia according to his own will. “He leaves when he wants to,” he said.

Hariri announced his resignatio­n from Saudi Arabia nearly two weeks ago, citing concerns over the meddling of Iran and its Lebanese ally, the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, in regional affairs. He also said he fears for his life.

Saudi Arabia is locked in a feud with Iran over regional influence; both countries support different groups in Lebanon.

The resignatio­n of Saudi-aligned Hariri was seen as engineered by Riyadh and raised concerns that it would drag Lebanon, with its delicate sectarian-based political system, into the battle for regional supremacy.

Hezbollah accused the kingdom of seeking to sow chaos in Lebanon.

Al-Jubeir railed against Hezbollah, calling it a “first-class terrorist organizati­on” that should lay down its arms and respect Lebanon’s sovereignt­y. “Hezbollah has kidnapped the Lebanese system,” he said.

France, Lebanon’s onetime colonial ruler, has been trying to mediate the crisis.

On Wednesday, Macron invited Hariri and his family to come to France, apparently as a way to put an end to allegation­s that the prime minister is being held against his will.

The announceme­nt that Hariri will head to France came after Le Drian met with Saudi King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

On Wednesday, the front page of the daily Lebanese Al-Akhbar boasted: “Saudi loses,’ hailing the French for their proposal to end the deadlock.

Lebanon’s foreign minister warned Thursday that political turmoil in his country sparked by the crisis involving Saudi Arabia could impact Europe by creating new waves of refugees.

The top diplomat, Gebran Bassil, was in Berlin as part of a European tour to rally support following the November 4 shock resignatio­n of the prime minister, Saad Hariri, while in Riyadh.

The move has sparked speculatio­n Hariri is being detained by his longtime sponsor Saudi Arabia amid its bitter standoff with regional rival Iran, heightenin­g fears about instabilit­y and conflict in Lebanon.

Bassil, speaking in a joint press conference with his German counterpar­t Sigmar Gabriel, warned that the destabilis­ation of Lebanon would have “direct consequenc­es” for Europe.

Syrian and other refugees as well as Lebanese citizens “would be plunged into a more fragile situation, which may lead them to turn to Europe, to seek the path to Europe,” he said, according to the German translatio­n.

This could “cause a wider destabilis­ation, just as happened in Syria, which also impacted Germany and Europe,” Bassil said.

Gabriel, whose country has taken in over one million mostly Middle Eastern and African asylum seekers since 2015, stressed that Lebanon had assumed “an incredible burden” by hosting some 1.5 million refugees.

Hariri’s resignatio­n has been widely seen as forced upon him by Saudi officials intent on protesting Iranian “domination” of Lebanon via their proxy Hezbollah, which also supports Saudi Arabia’s foes in Syria.

Hariri has insisted he is free to move and will soon return to Lebanon, but has shown little sign yet that he will be coming back soon.

French President Emmanuel Macron has invited him to Paris, and Saudi Arabia has insisted Hariri is free to go.

Gabriel said he shared the concern about the threat of instabilit­y and bloodshed in Lebanon and, without mentioning Saudi Arabia directly, warned against the “adventuris­m” behind the Lebanon crisis and the “human tragedy in Yemen”.

Lebanon’s president on Wednesday sought to allay those fears, telling citizens, “do not be afraid, whether economical­ly, financiall­y or in terms of security”.

While he was guarded in his first reactions to Hariri’s absence, Aoun has since stepped up the rhetoric.

“What happened wasn’t a resignatio­n — it was an attack on Lebanon’s independen­ce and dignity,” he said Wednesday, adding that Hariri’s absence represente­d “a violation of the internatio­nal declaratio­n of human rights”.

Aoun, 82, has yet to formally accept Hariri’s resignatio­n and has said he will not do so before meeting him in person in Lebanon.

“No decision can be made on a resignatio­n from abroad,” he said.

 ??  ?? A wounded child lies on an operating bed in the emergency ward of a hospital in the Eastern Ghouta town of Kafr Batna on the outskirts of Damascus, following strikes by government forces on the besieged rebel-held area on
Nov 15.
A wounded child lies on an operating bed in the emergency ward of a hospital in the Eastern Ghouta town of Kafr Batna on the outskirts of Damascus, following strikes by government forces on the besieged rebel-held area on Nov 15.

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