Absent leader:
Lebanese prime minister says he will return home within days.
BEIRUT — Lebanon’s prime minister, Saad Hariri, whose mysterious sojourn in Saudi Arabia has shaken the Middle East, said in a television interview Sunday night that he is free to leave, that he had left Lebanon to protect himself and that he will return home “within days.”
But the remarks — his first in public since he unexpectedly flew to Saudi Arabia on Nov. 3 and announced his resignation from there a day later — seemed unlikely to clear up the confusion and tension over whether he had acted freely, whether he was in effect a hostage of the Saudis, and whether he had been pressured to resign as part of a larger strategy by the Saudis to increase pressure on their regional rival, Iran.
Those who have questions about his situation were unlikely to be persuaded by the interview carried on the channel of Hariri’s pro-Saudi political party. At least five Lebanese television stations refused to carry the interview amid concerns over whether Hariri was able to speak freely.
Lebanon’s president, Michel Aoun, had said earlier that anything Hariri says from Saudi Arabia “does not reflect the truth and is but the result of the mysterious and dubious situation he is undergoing in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and hence cannot be taken seriously.”
“I’m free, I could leave tomorrow,” Hariri said in the interview. He added, however, that information had come to light while he was in Riyadh that convinced him that he needed to review his security arrangements before returning.
He had said in his resignation speech on Nov. 4 that there were threats against his life and that he is quitting because of interference in Lebanon by Iran and the dominance of its ally, the Lebanese Shiite militant group and political party, Hezbollah, which is part of the unity Cabinet he led.
But in the interview, he seemed to leave open the question of whether his resignation is final. He said he would resign in person in the proper constitutional manner, but also that he would hold conversations with Aoun and others, and that he could possibly stay in office if Lebanon could follow a policy of neutrality in the region.
The interview came hours after a record number of people had taken part in Beirut’s annual marathon, which for many became a kind of statement of defiance against international interference in Lebanon, by any country.
People passed out baseball caps with slogans such as “Bring back our PM.” The marathon is always billed as a statement of unity and resilience and given the regional tensions, Sunday’s was even more so.
Around 47,000 people — more than ever — showed up to run in the marathon and a number of shorter races, according to organizers.