Gulf Today

Pope meets Hariri, calls on leaders to end crisis

Francis reaffirms his desire to visit Lebanon; the Pontiff ‘sees Lebanon as a message of neutrality and coexistenc­e,’ says Pm-designate

-

Popefranci­smetlebane­seprimemin­ister-designate Saad Hariri on Thursday and urged all Lebanese political leaders to “urgently commit themselves to the benefit of the nation,” as the country endures a series of crises and disagreeme­nts that have prevented the formation of a government.

Francis also reaffirmed during the 30-minute audience his desire to visit Lebanon as soon as conditions permit, according to a statement from the Vatican spokesman.

“This is a message to all Lebanese and all parties that we have to hurry up in the formation of a government,” Hariri told Lebanese reporters travelling with him ater the audience.

“The Pope sees Lebanon as a message of neutrality and coexistenc­e.” Hariri’s visit to the Vatican comes as Lebanon is experienci­ng its worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history following decades of widespread corruption.

Since late 2019, the local currency has lost 90% of its value, and more than half of the country’s population now lives in poverty, according to the World Bank.

Hariri has been touring the Middle East and

Europe to win support for his efforts to form a government. Among the countries he recently visited were France, Turkey, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. He was also meeting on Thursday with Italian officials.

Hariri has not been able to form a cabinet six months ater he was chosen for the prime minister’s post amid deep disagreeme­nts between him and President Michel Aoun.

One of the main points of difference includes Aoun’s rejection of Hariri’s plan to choose some Christian members of the new government.

Aoun is a Maronite Catholic, while Hariri is Sunni Muslim.

According to Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the president has to be a Maronite and the parliament speaker a Shiite Muslim, while the prime minister has to be a Sunni.

Parliament and cabinet seats are equally split between Muslims and Christians.

The Vatican said that during the meeting with Hariri, Francis expressed his solidarity with the Lebanese people who are “living in great difficulty and uncertaint­y, and recalled the responsibi­lity of all political forces to urgently commit themselves to the benefit of the nation.” Francis is hoping that Lebanon can once again embody “the fortress of the cedars, the diversity that from weakness becomes strength in the great reconciled people,” the statement said.

Hariri said he asked the Vatican “to be concerned about Lebanon and to intervene where they can be effective because this is what concerns Lebanon and the Lebanese.” He said: “We are in a very bad situation, but once we form a government we can stop the collapse.” The Vatican didn’t list the meeting on Francis’ official agenda given that Hariri isn’t yet in office; it was described by the Vatican as a private audience, not an official state visit that carries with it specific protocol.

Lebanon, a Mediterran­ean nation of 5 million, has the largest percentage of Christians in the Middle East and is the only Arab country with a Christian head of state. Christians make up a third of the population.

Separately, Aoun warned against the destructio­n of property on Thursday ater the removal of a judge from a financial corruption probe last week prompted her and her supporters to storm a currency exchange bureau.

Aoun made the remarks in a statement ater a security meeting that included caretaker prime minister Hassan Diab, the interior minister and other officials.

On Wednesday, judge Ghada Aoun and others had stormed the offices of a foreign exchange dealer in defiance of her removal from the investigat­ion, with some of them breaking down doors, local media reported.

It was the second such atempt to enter the bureau by judge Aoun, who is not directly related to the president and whose supporters appeared largely to back Aoun’s party.

Judge Aoun, chief prosecutor of the Mount Lebanon region, took folders and computers out of the building with her, the state news agency reported. Security forces deployed to the scene.

Aoun, who had also sought to question central bank chief Riad Salameh, has objected to her removal from financial crimes cases last week by Lebanese public prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Pope Francis and Saad Hariri exchange gifts during a private audience in The Vatican on Thursday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Pope Francis and Saad Hariri exchange gifts during a private audience in The Vatican on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain