Arab News

Mikati’s makeshift Lebanese govt to assume presidenti­al powers

- Najia Houssari Beirut

Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister has said he hopes to end the presidenti­al vacuum but that his Cabinet has the right to assume the office’s powers following the departure of Michel Aoun without a replacemen­t.

Najib Mikati said that the country’s constituti­on allowed for his administra­tion’s use of presidenti­al powers, and that he did not seek conflict in the crisis gripping Lebanese politics.

The comments followed a lastgasp attempt to dissolve Mikati’s caretaker government by Aoun, 89, shortly before his term ended on Sunday. However, both Mikati and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri effectivel­y ignored the decree.

Mikati said he was confident that ministers from across Lebanon’s political spectrum would attend Cabinet sessions and that there would be no boycott in the wake of Aoun’s attempt. He added that working in the national interest “will unite us.”

Berri announced a parliament­ary session next Thursday to read through Aoun’s decree, eliminatin­g the possibilit­y of dissolving the caretaker government and forming a replacemen­t within Aoun’s constituti­onal term.

Melhem Khalaf, an MP, told Arab News: “Electing a new president is the priority now. We, the deputies, are now an electing body and we do not have the right to do anything else.”

“What is the purpose behind the letter sent by Aoun to the parliament? Is it to discuss an outgoing president? What is the aim of the letter? If it is to withdraw Mikati’s designatio­n, then what

is the mechanism for that? There’s no mechanism.”

MP Kassem Hachem of Berri’s parliament­ary bloc said the speaker had met all of his obligation­s.

“However, if some people think that the institutio­ns should be at Aoun’s disposal, then this does not sit right with Berri,” he

added.

Aoun’s six-year term was marred by mass protests, an economic meltdown and the August 2020 port explosion that killed hundreds of people and destroyed large areas of Beirut.

He was cheered by supporters of his Free Patriotic Movement, but few others, as he left office. Families of the Beirut Port explosion victims, namely mothers carrying pictures of their dead children, expressed their anger in the Sassine Square in Ashrafieh by tearing up Aoun’s pictures.

One said that Aoun “has the power to cripple the country, kill our children, form an alliance with the biggest militia and paralyze the government and the republic, while we receive the bodies of our dead children.”

She also said Aoun knew that ammonium nitrate, the cause of the blast, was stored at the port but did nothing under the pretext of not having any powers.

 ?? ?? Michel Aoun
Michel Aoun

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