Arab News

Maronite patriarch tells Hariri: ‘Form govt or Lebanon will die’

After meeting Aoun, Al-Rahi says ‘everybody has violated the constituti­on’

- Najia Houssari Beirut

Lebanon’s Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi on Wednesday urged Prime Ministerde­signate Saad Hariri to urgently form a government in collaborat­ion with President Michel Aoun “according to the spirit of the constituti­on.”

Al-Rahi’s statement followed his return from the Vatican, where he took part in a prayer and gathering for Lebanon hosted by Pope Francis.

After meeting Aoun, Al-Rahi blamed Lebanon’s worsening crisis on “the absence of a government, which is ruining the economy, increasing unemployme­nt and closing enterprise­s.”

Without executive authority, the country will die, he warned.

Last week at the Vatican, Al-Rahi said that “everybody is responsibl­e for the current situation in Lebanon, including the president.”

On Wednesday, at the Presidenti­al Palace, he reiterated that “everybody has violated the constituti­on.”

Two days ago, Hariri visited Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, whose initiative to form a government of 24 ministers was obstructed by Aoun’s insistence on a blocking third, or a third of all Cabinet seats, effectivel­y giving his team veto power over government decisions.

This coincided with reports on Wednesday that Hariri intends to abandon his efforts to form the government, a mission assigned to him nine months ago by Aoun and parliament.

At that time, Hariri had agreed to form a government of 18 ministers of technocrat­s to implement economic, financial and administra­tive reforms, according to the French initiative.

On Wednesday, Arab News was told that efforts were being made to find a replacemen­t for Hariri in order to avoid a government vacuum.

However, the figures being considered, including former prime ministers, refused to take on the role because of past failures to reach an agreement.

MP Bilal Abdullah, a member of the Democratic Gathering bloc, told Arab News: “Renewing the talk about the intention of Hariri to end his mission is lethal for the Lebanese and the economy. It adds to the humiliatio­n of the citizens who are trying to secure their medicines, transporta­tion and food.

“What we need are serious steps to form the government without obstacles or high demands, as the president and the PM-designate are doing now.”

He said that Al-Rahi’s appeal to form the government will put pressure on Hariri to resign.

“The patriarch is the one who worked most on reconcilia­tion between the two sides but failed. He is not a party and should work on eliminatin­g obstacles, and not

call on one side to rush in forming the government,” Abdullah said.

“If Hariri resigns, there will be repercussi­ons, especially if he chooses to join the opposition.”

Abdullah said that any replacemen­t for Hariri was destined to fail, adding: “We should focus on reconcilia­tion.”

Al-Rahi called on the Lebanese to show resilience and be patient, saying that “after dark there will be daylight.”

However, Wednesday’s dawn presented another bleak picture of Lebanon.

Sheikh Hassan Merheb, imam of a mosque in Tariq El-Jdideh, posted a photo of a man praying with his oxygen device next to him.

Merheb wrote: “The man has no electricit­y at home, so he came to the mosque at dawn to use the power generated by the mosque’s generator. Damn all those who got us to this situation.”

Shortages of fuel and medicine as subsidies are gradually lifted from many commoditie­s and goods are adding to the problems facing Lebanon’s hard-hit population.

Dr. Sharaf Abou Sharaf, head of the Lebanese Order of Physicians, said: “Lebanese children have started to suffer from the unavailabi­lity of vaccines. This poses a serious threat to new generation­s.”

Protesters in Tripoli stormed a drugs warehouse and said that they found “hundreds of medicines that are unavailabl­e in the pharmacies.”

What we need are serious steps to form the government without obstacles or high demands, as the president and the PMdesignat­e are doing now.

 ?? AFP ?? An elderly man connected to an oxygen respirator reads the Holy Qur’an inside a mosque in Beirut in this photo shared by Sheikh Hassan Merheb, imam of the mosque. The asthma patient was forced to plug in his respirator at the mosque as growing power cuts have crippled life in the county. ‘Damn all those who got us to this situation,’ Merheb said.
AFP An elderly man connected to an oxygen respirator reads the Holy Qur’an inside a mosque in Beirut in this photo shared by Sheikh Hassan Merheb, imam of the mosque. The asthma patient was forced to plug in his respirator at the mosque as growing power cuts have crippled life in the county. ‘Damn all those who got us to this situation,’ Merheb said.

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