Gulf News

Three more MPs quit, criticise top politician­s

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Athree-member Lebanese parliament­ary bloc resigned yesterday in protest at the Beirut blast widely blamed on government negligence and corruption, bringing to five the number of MPs to quit since the disaster.

In an emotional speech during a funeral service for one of his top party officials who died in Tuesday’s blast, Samy Gemayel announced his resignatio­n and that of the two other MPs from his Kataeb party.

“Your comrades took the decision to resign from parliament,” Gemayel said, addressing Kataeb secretaryg­eneral Nazar Najarian, one of the 154 confirmed victims of the explosion at Beirut port.

Isolation deadlock

Gemayel criticised the reactions of several top politician­s who argued the internatio­nal aid effort following the disaster would be an opportunit­y to break the diplomatic isolation of Lebanon. “A new Lebanon must be born on the ruins of the old one, which you represent,” he said, addressing the authoritie­s at large and their clan leaders.

The Christian party’s three resignatio­ns from the 128-seat parliament come after those of Marwan Hamade from the party of Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and independen­t MP Paula Yacoubian.

‘Everyone should resign’

Yacoubian told the CNN news channel that she was urging the entire parliament to stand down.

“As the MP of Beirut, I took the decision of resigning because I feel I’m a false witness in this parliament,” she said.

“There’s nothing we can do, the decision-making is outside the parliament,” she said. “Everyone should resign.”

Lebanon’s ambassador to Jordan also resigned in the aftermath of the blast, caused when fire spread to a depot where a huge amount of ammonium nitrate had been stored for years, unsecured.

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