The National - News

HARIRI WITHDRAWS HIS RESIGNATIO­N

Announceme­nt came as Lebanon cabinet affirms his government’s support for country’s policy of disassocia­tion from regional conflicts

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Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri withdrew his resignatio­n yesterday, capping a tumultuous month in Lebanese politics.

The announceme­nt came as Mr Hariri’s cabinet, which met for the first time since his surprise announceme­nt on November 4, unanimousl­y affirmed the government’s support for Lebanon’s policy of disassocia­tion from regional conflicts.

Mr Hariri has said that his resignatio­n, which he announced from the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh, was intended to send a “positive shock” to Lebanese political parties, particular­ly Hizbollah.

Hizbollah is the only Lebanese political party to still maintain a militia and has intervened on behalf of Syrian president Bashar Al Assad in that country’s civil war. The group has also helped to train Iraqi forces in their successful campaign against ISIL.

Hizbollah and the Syrian and Iraqi government­s are allies of Iran, whose growing influence in the Arab world has angered Saudi Arabia. The Saudis have backed rebel factions in Syria that sought to depose Mr Al Assad and have more recently accused Hizbollah of providing support for rebels in Yemen, who are fighting Saudi-backed factions there on behalf of the internatio­nally recognised government of Yemeni president Abdrabu Mansur Hadi.

After the meeting, Mr Hariri read from a statement issued by the cabinet.

“The council of ministers thanked the prime minister for rescinding his resignatio­n,” the statement said. “The Lebanese government, in all its political components, has committed to distance itself from all conflicts, wars, and internal affairs of Arab states.”

Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said last month that his fighters would be returning from Iraq now that ISIL, which for a time controlled large swaths of the country, including the city of Mosul, had largely been defeated.

It is unclear whether the group will make any further concession­s. The Lebanese newspaper The

Daily Star reported that Mohammed Fneish, one of Hizbollah’s two cabinet ministers, had affirmed the government’s disassocia­tion policy.

Although Mr Hariri had already signalled he was likely to withdraw his resignatio­n, the official announceme­nt allows Lebanon’s temporaril­y paralysed political system to begin moving again.

Mr Hariri had remained outside Lebanon for 18 days after his resignatio­n speech, during which he cited fear of assassinat­ion as one of his reasons for stepping down.

Hizbollah members have been accused by a United Nations tribunal in The Hague of assassinat­ing Mr Hariri’s father, former prime minister Rafik Hariri, who was killed in a Beirut car bombing in 2005.

That event led to widespread protests and the withdrawal of the Syrian military, which had occupied Lebanon for nearly 30 years.

It also split the country’s political groups into two main blocs, one led by Hizbollah and the other by Mr Hariri’s Future Movement. That rivalry led to the collapse of Mr Hariri’s government during his first term as prime minister in 2011.

The war in Syria changed the direction of Lebanese politics by last year, when Mr Hariri began a new term as prime minister and entered a consensus government with Hizbollah.

Although Mr Hariri’s resignatio­n initially prompted fears Lebanon could be thrown into political and economic chaos, the events instead provided a rare moment of political unity in the country.

On his official Twitter account yesterday, Lebanon’s president, Michel Aoun, praised that unity when meeting cabinet ministers. Mr Aoun had refused to accept the resignatio­n until Mr Hariri had returned to Lebanon.

“Countries are not measured by their size,” Mr Aoun said. “They are all equal in dignity and hence our approach to the crisis was based on not accepting any encroachme­nt on our dignity by any authority in the world. Our unity as Lebanese was the basis for protecting the country’s stability.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Lebanon’s president Michel Aoun, right, talks to prime minister Saad Al Hariri during a cabinet meeting in Beirut yesterday
Reuters Lebanon’s president Michel Aoun, right, talks to prime minister Saad Al Hariri during a cabinet meeting in Beirut yesterday

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