Arab News

Macron urges Lebanon parties to urgently elect new president

French leader makes plea after meeting with Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi

- Najia Houssari Beirut

French President Emmanuel Macron has urged Lebanon’s divided politician­s to save the country from “drowning in crises” by immediatel­y electing a new president.

The French leader made his plea following a meeting with Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi. A French presidency statement, issued on Wednesday, said: “Macron and Al-Rahi expressed their deep concerns about the crisis in Lebanon and the paralysis of institutio­ns, which has been exacerbate­d by the presidenti­al vacuum for the past seven months.

“They agreed on the necessity of electing a president for the republic without delay.”

The statement quoted Macron as highlighti­ng, “the need to keep

Lebanon’s Christians at the heart of the sectarian and institutio­nal balance of the Lebanese state.”

The president described Lebanon as a country “drowning in crises” adding that “the political deadlock has been an obstacle to the reforms without which there can be no recovery and lasting stability in Lebanon.”

Lebanon has entered its eighth month without being able to elect a president.

Hezbollah and its allies support the Marada Movement leader, Suleiman Frangieh, who is close to Syrian President Bashar Assad, but the largest parliament­ary blocs oppose him in favor of their own candidate, former minister Jihad Azour, currently the director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Middle East and Central Asia department. Agence France-Presse quoted sources in Paris as saying that, “Al-Rahi and Macron discussed bridging the gap between

Lebanese parties to agree on a presidenti­al candidate and complete the electoral process.” No political party has the necessary majority to elect its presidenti­al candidate in parliament­ary elections.

Other parties refuse to bring

a compromise candidate and because of the impasse, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has not set a date for what would be the 12th attempt to elect a president.

The country is struggling with economic, financial, and administra­tive crises that the caretaker government has been unable to resolve due to its inability to authorize decisions except in exceptiona­l cases.

When the term of Lebanon’s central bank governor, Riad Salameh, is due to terminate at the end of July, another key vacancy will appear in the country. Salameh is being investigat­ed by several European countries and the Lebanese judiciary over allegation­s of corruption.

He appeared before the public prosecutor of the Court of Cassation, Judge Imad Qabalan, on Wednesday at the Palace of Justice in Beirut to be questioned about an arrest warrant recently issued against him by the German public prosecutor on charges of money laundering, forgery, and embezzleme­nt.

Salameh’s son, Nadi, and Marwan Issa Al-Khoury, were also named in the German arrest warrant without any demand for their arrest, but rather a request that Salameh be held accountabl­e for them.

The French judiciary has accused the central bank chief, his brother Raja Salameh, and his assistant Marianne Hoayek, of amassing a huge fortune in Europe, including money and real estate, through complex financial arrangemen­ts and embezzleme­nt of large sums of Lebanese public funds. Salameh’s lawyers have filed an appeal against the charges.

The Lebanese judiciary is still awaiting a response from their French counterpar­ts over the possibilit­y of merging the European and Lebanese files on Salameh and prosecutin­g him in Lebanon, to avoid extraditio­n. Meanwhile, Raja Salameh failed to appear before a Paris court on Wednesday, citing through his legal representa­tive in Lebanon medical reasons for his absence.

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