Arab News

New govt by year-end: Hariri

Aoun says results of his efforts to break Lebanon’s political deadlock will appear this week

- AFP, Reuters London, Beirut AFP

Lebanon’s Prime Ministerde­signate, Saad Hariri, said on Thursday he is “pretty sure” that a six-monthold deadlock on forming a government will be broken by the end of the year.

He was speaking at London’s Chatham House think tank, seven months after parliament­ary elections were held in Lebanon.

“I am pretty sure by the end of the year we will have a government,” he said. “We are getting there. It is not a regional issue, it is an internal issue... There is still one obstacle and I am sure we will be able to resolve it,” he said.

President Michel Aoun said results of his efforts to break the months-long deadlock appear this week.

Heavily indebted and with a stagnant economy, Lebanon desperatel­y needs a new government to implement economic reforms that are required to put its public finances on a more sustainabl­e footing and unlock pledges of foreign aid.

A general election in May gave rise to months of wrangling between the rival parties to form a coalition government under the country’s sectarian system, with Saad Hariri designated as prime minister.

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri was cited as saying he was “optimistic for the possibilit­y of a solution soon” and caretaker Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil said Lebanon would definitely form a new government “despite all obstacles.”

On Tuesday, Aoun

would

said

the government formation could not be resolved in the traditiona­l way between the prime minister-designate and other parties, and that he had to get involved to avoid “catastroph­e” — an apparent reference to the economy. He said on Wednesday the results of his new effort would appear “in the next two days.”

Bassil, who is also Aoun’s son-inlaw and head of the political party he founded, said partnershi­p between Aoun and Hariri would “certainly lead to the formation of a new government, despite all obstacles”.

He was speaking at a London conference which the Lebanese government hopes will garner investor interest in a capital investment program that aims to tap into billions of dollars of aid pledged at a donors’ conference in April.

But foreign government­s and internatio­nal institutio­ns first want Lebanon to implement long-stalled economic reforms.

The country has the world’s third largest public debt compared to its GDP, at more than 150 percent. Parliament Speaker Berri’s optimism stemmed from Aoun’s interventi­on in the process, lawmaker Ali Bazzi said.

Agreement on the makeup of the new Cabinet has met a series of obstacles as Hariri has sought to forge a deal parceling out 30 Cabinet posts among rival groups according to the sectarian system.

The final hurdle has been over Sunni representa­tion, with the powerful Iran-backed Shiite group Hezbollah demanding a Cabinet seat for one of its Sunni allies who gained ground in the election.

Analysts believe one compromise could be for Aoun to nominate one of the Hezbollah-aligned Sunnis, or a figure acceptable to them, among a group of ministers named by the president.

Hariri said on Twitter that the new government would be firmly committed to reforms agreed at the April donors conference, including fiscal reforms.

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