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LEBANON SET TO ENTER NEW YEAR IN CRISIS IN ABSENCE OF LEADERSHIP

▶ Presidenti­al vacuum stretches into 14th month, posing a threat to national security, writes Jamie Prentis in Beirut

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Nearly 14 months since Michel Aoun, Lebanon’s former head of state, vacated the Baabda presidenti­al palace, the nation is poised to enter the new year without a president, with no resolution in sight despite 12 intermitte­nt parliament­ary sessions.

Presidenti­al vacuums are common in Lebanon, with the new head of state normally elected after a series of behind-closed-doors deals are hammered out. But now the situation is particular­ly acute in a country entrenched in a more than four-year economic crisis, with only a caretaker government and at risk of being dragged further into the Israel-Gaza war.

“It could have devastatin­g consequenc­es because we are in the midst of a regional war and in the midst of state collapse,” said Karim Bitar, a professor of Internatio­nal Relations at Saint Joseph University in Beirut.

“Lebanon does simply not have the luxury of allowing this presidenti­al vacuum to continue.”

Choosing a president in Lebanon’s confession­al system is a complex process. The president must be a Maronite Christian and must be nominated by Lebanon’s 128-seat parliament, where no bloc holds a majority.

This time, no candidate has come close to securing the two-thirds majority required to be approved in the first round of voting. Further sessions in the same round, where a candidate only needs an absolute majority, have not taken place because the quorum has been lost as MPs leave the room in an effort to prevent their rival candidate from obtaining the required support.

“The way I would describe it is much more than the usual Lebanese deadlock. We have entered a situation where the abnormal has become the new normal, where everyone seems to be Waiting for Godot,” said Prof Bitar, referring to the Samuel Beckett play where two characters wait for someone to turn up but they never do.

He said there was no lack of Lebanese politician­s using a range of issues as excuses to procrastin­ate.

“Today, some of them say they are waiting to see the results of the war on Gaza. Later, we might hear that they are waiting to see the result of the US presidenti­al election and maybe later, wait for the new president to take office. So it’s an endless vicious circle,” he said.

Votes were divided between two main candidates for the most recent session in June – Jihad Azour, a senior official in the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, and Suleiman Frangieh, the scion of an influentia­l politician dynasty who is a close friend of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad.

Supporters of both candidates show little sign of compromise. That is especially the case with the two major Shiite parties Hezbollah and the Amal Movement – led by parliament­ary speaker Nabih Berri – who seem intent on continuing their support for Mr Frangieh.

Those who voted for Mr Azour are rankled by Hezbollah and Amal’s stubborn backing of Mr Frangieh. They say there is no point looking for a “third way” candidate when the Shiite parties will not soften their approach.

“We have shown a great will to elect a president and we have done everything possible to go for an election and end this vacuum, but unfortunat­ely this is not echoed by the other group who is still today trying to delay it for a certain reason or another,” said a representa­tive of parliament’s largest party, the Lebanese Forces, which supported Mr Azour in June.

The Lebanese Forces had previously backed MP Michel Moawad for president in the preceding 11 sessions. “Maybe they consider that the regional balance will shift in their favour, maybe they believe they can influence more regional powers to fight their fight and lead their candidate to the presidency,” the representa­tive continued.

“They have lots of calculatio­ns that are non-Lebanese, all our investment is to boost the Lebanese institutio­ns and finalise this election,” the source said, referring to the close ties Hezbollah has with Iran. It took about two and a half years before Mr Aoun was finally elected in 2016, in part the result of a deal with his long-time Christian foe Samir Geagea, the leader of the Lebanese Forces.

“We have seen this ugly scenario before: it took 29 months to elect a president between 2014 and 2016,” said

Prof Bitar. “As long as there is no decision on the part of the ruling oligarchs, the five or six sectarian leaders that are running this country, that it is time to go back to the state, to abide by the constituti­on, to the state of law, to reclaim the state and institutio­ns, it could take for ever.

“People are becoming accustomed to this completely abnormal situation,” he added.

The presidency had fallen down the agenda because of the outbreak of the Israel-Gaza war across Lebanon’s southern border, which has spilt into daily cross-border fire between Israeli forces and Hezbollah.

However, the presidency is one of the fundamenta­l issues that faces the dysfunctio­nal Lebanese state. On a visit to Beirut last month, French presidenti­al envoy Jean Yves Le Drian raised the issue of the presidency again.

France is part of the so-called quintet for Lebanon, which also includes Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar and the US.

The group has often met over the vacancy and repeatedly urged MPs to end the impasse.

It is understood that Mr Le Drian for the first time suggested a “third way” in his talks with politician­s, while voicing an acceptance that Mr Frangieh and Mr Azour stood no chance of succeeding Mr Aoun.

A rare recent success in Lebanon’s fragmented political scene was averting another leadership vacuum at the head of the army, extending Gen Joseph Aoun’s term by a year.

With no president to appoint a successor and the caretaker government largely stripped of its powers, it fell to MPs to legislate to stop issues arising.

But, as pointed out by Melhem Khalaf – a new MP closely linked to the 2019 protests against the ruling class – this urgency to prevent another vacuum should also extend to the presidency.

He asked those who had warned of potential instabilit­y at the top of the army if a resolution was not found: “What about the risk of not electing a President of the Republic?” Mr Khalaf, a legal expert, argued that, according to Article 74 of the Lebanese constituti­on, in the event of a presidenti­al vacancy parliament should convene immediatel­y and not stop until a new head of state is elected.

“If you look back, many things would really have been solved if we had a president. The commander would have been [simply] running business if there was a president. But today it’s a matter of state security,” said the Lebanese Forces representa­tive.

Since Mr Aoun’s term expired in October 31 the terms of two other crucial positions have ended, with no permanent successor announced because there was no president to appoint them – General Security chief Abbas Ibrahim and controvers­ial central bank governor Riad Salameh.

But the continued absence of a president is seen as a much more serious situation, especially with a caretaker government largely stripped of its powers, in a country where Israel and Hezbollah are engaged in daily cross border attacks.

It is also a country that has since 2019 been embroiled in one of the worst economic crises in modern history, with the local currency losing about 98 per cent of its value and much of the population plunged into poverty.

The Lebanese Forces backed MP Michel Moawad to become president in the preceding 11 sessions

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 ?? Getty Images, Reuters, AFP ?? Clockwise from top, Michel Moawad, centre, Suleiman Frangieh and Jihad Azour are all vying to be Lebanon’s next president
Getty Images, Reuters, AFP Clockwise from top, Michel Moawad, centre, Suleiman Frangieh and Jihad Azour are all vying to be Lebanon’s next president

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