Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hariri invited to France amid resignatio­n furor

Nation tries to mediate crisis with Saudi Arabia

- By Philip Issa and Angela Charlton The Associated Press

BEIRUT — French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday invited Saad Hariri and his family to come to France after the Lebanese prime minister’s surprise resignatio­n earlier this month, amid allegation­s that Saudi Arabia is holding him prisoner.

France, Lebanon’s onetime colonial ruler, has been trying to mediate the crisis between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia.

Macron said he was not offering Hariri political “exile,” but that it was paramount to dispel fears that Saudi Arabia had taken the Lebanese premier prisoner.

“We need to have leaders who are free to express themselves,” said Macron. “It’s important that (Hariri) is able to advance the political process in his country in the coming days and weeks.”

An official in the French president’s office, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to be named publicly, said Hariri is expected to travel to France in the coming days with his family.

Macron said the invitation was extended to the premier after discussion between the two and Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Lebanon’s president had ear- lier accused the Gulf kingdom of detaining Hariri, calling it an act of “aggression” and asking U.N. Security Council nations and European government­s to intervene. It was the first time Michel Aoun described Hariri as a detainee since his Nov. 4 resignatio­n.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani meanwhile ratcheted up the rhetoric against Saudi Arabia, his country’s main regional rival, saying the kingdom pressured Hariri to resign in a “rare” interventi­on in another nation’s affairs.

Rouhani also accused Saudi Arabia, without naming the kingdom, of “begging” Israel to bomb Lebanon. Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Lebanon’s Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, has made the same accusation.

Saudi Arabia has accused Hezbollah of aiding Iran-allied rebels in Yemen, who fired a ballistic missile that was intercepte­d outside the Saudi capital earlier this month. Hezbollah has said Saudi Arabia forced Hariri to resign in order to bring down his coalition government, which includes the group.

Hariri is a Saudi ally who holds dual citizenshi­p. He announced his unexpected resignatio­n in a pre-recorded statement broadcast on Saudi TV, in which he lashed out at Hezbollah and said he feared for his safety.

“We consider him detained, arrested” in violation of internatio­nal laws, Aoun wrote on his official Twitter account. Aoun is a Hezbollah ally but is personally close to Hariri.

Aoun said Saudi Arabia had committed a “hostile act against Lebanon,” and that he had called the ambassador­s of U.N. Security Council nations about the matter. He said Arab mediation to resolve the crisis had failed.

In a quick response to Aoun, Hariri tweeted that he was fine and will return to Lebanon as promised.

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 ??  ?? The Associated Press file In 2005, Bahaa Hariri, right, and Saad Hariri, sons of slain Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, visit the scene where their father was assassinat­ed in Beirut.
The Associated Press file In 2005, Bahaa Hariri, right, and Saad Hariri, sons of slain Lebanese former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, visit the scene where their father was assassinat­ed in Beirut.

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