The National - News

LEBANON CARETAKER PM’S THREAT TO HALT HIS STATE DUTIES

▶ Hassan Diab wants a new Cabinet to prevent Lebanon’s slide into chaos

- SUNNIVA ROSE Beirut

Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister is threatenin­g to refuse to carry out his duties in an attempt to force politician­s to form a new cabinet.

Hassan Diab made the threat in a televised speech on Saturday. It is hoped that a new cabinet could tackle the country’s worsening economic and social crises.

“If withdrawin­g helps with cabinet formation, then I am ready to resort to it, although it goes against my conviction­s because it disrupts the entire state and is detrimenta­l to the Lebanese,” Mr Diab said.

He gave his speech after five consecutiv­e days of protests across the country, triggered by the Lebanese pound reaching a historic low on Tuesday, at 10,000 pounds to the US dollar.

Despite being officially pegged at 1,500 pounds to the dollar, the local currency has been steadily losing value on the black market since the start of the country’s economic crisis in 2019.

“Who bears responsibi­lity for this rapid downward spiral? Who can deal with the relevant dangerous repercussi­ons? What are you waiting for?” Mr Diab said. “Further meltdown? Further human suffering? Further chaos?”

But he shied away from identifyin­g who he was criticisin­g.

Mr Diab resigned on August 10, after the scandal that followed the deadly explosion at Beirut’s port, which killed more than 200 people.

Former prime minister Saad Hariri was nominated as Mr Diab’s successor on October 22 but has yet to form a government because political parties are bickering over ministeria­l posts.

Disagreeme­nts between Mr Hariri’s party – the Future Movement – and President Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement have gone public, with each side regularly accusing the other of blocking progress.

Mr Diab, who announced last March that Lebanon was defaulting for the first time ever on its debt, said the country needed a new government to start negotiatio­ns with the internatio­nal community aimed at securing a financial aid package.

“The equation is clear: we cannot solve the social crisis without resolving the financial crisis. We cannot solve the financial crisis without resuming negotiatio­ns with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund,” Mr Diab said.

“We cannot carry on negotiatio­ns with the IMF without undertakin­g reforms, and we cannot carry out reforms without forming a new government.”

The caretaker prime minister alluded to recent videos that went viral on Lebanese social media of customers fighting over baby milk in supermarke­ts.

“Doesn’t the scramble for milk constitute a sufficient incentive to transcend formalitie­s and roughen the edges in order to form a government?” he asked.

Sami Nader, director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs in Lebanon, said that Mr Diab was in effect admitting that his caretaker government could not prevent social breakdown.

“He is making it clear that there is no solution without the IMF despite the absence of political consensus on this issue,” he said.

Karim Bitar, director of the Institute of Political Science at the Saint Joseph University of Beirut, told The National that he could not recall a precedent in Lebanese history of a caretaker prime minister refusing to perform his duties.

The move is at risk of “falling on deaf ears”, Mr Bitar said. “I would say this is a dignified statement, but it might not have any consequenc­es.

“The divisions between the Future Movement and the Free Patriotic Movement are too deeply entrenched.”

 ?? EPA ?? Mr Diab made the threat during a speech on Saturday
EPA Mr Diab made the threat during a speech on Saturday

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