March 14 Lauds Suleiman's 'Sovereign' Stands: Lebanon in Need of New Govt., Not Dialogue

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The March 14 General Secretariat hailed on Wednesday President Michel Suleiman's “sovereign” positions during the current political crisis, renewing its call for the resignation of the government and formation of a neutral one.

It said in a statement after its weekly meeting: “All powers must now and always adhere to the state and national interests, instead of resorting to dialogue.”

It has been demonstrated that political forces approached the dialogue with conflicting agendas and “such a dialogue will only reproduce a government that adheres to the equation of the army, people, and resistance,” noted the General Secretariat.

“Such a cabinet covers for the killing machine, ensures impunity, and is subject to the Iranian-Syrian axis,” it added.

The March 14-led opposition announced its boycott of government-related work, including the national dialogue, in the wake of the assassination of Internal Security Forces Intelligence Bureau chief Brigadier General Wissam al-Hasan.

He was killed in a car bomb in Beirut's Ashrafiyeh district on October 19.

The opposition blamed Syria for the crime and accused the government, which is comprised of mainly pro-Syria allies, of covering up for the murder.

It has therefore demanded the resignation of the current government and the formation of a neutral one.

“The new cabinet should not be comprised of members of the March 8 and 14 camps, but officials who will not run in the 2013 parliamentary elections,” explained the General Secretariat.

“The government must work on extracting Lebanon from the state of despair, crime, bloody incidents, and social crises and transporting it to a normal one,” it stressed.

“It must also work on completing all preparations for the parliamentary elections to ensure that they will be held on time,” it said.

“Fears that the toppling of the government will create a power vacuum in Lebanon are unjustified,” it remarked.

Moreover, it noted that French President Francois Hollande's recent visit to Lebanon is a “strong sign that the desired stability and the current government cannot coexist.”

Hollande paid a brief visit to Lebanon on Sunday where he only met President Michel Suleiman.

“The March 14 forces are determined to continue on pressuring the government, through peaceful means in Beirut and Tripoli, until its demands are met,” declared the General Secretariat.

It added that its boycott will consequently continue.

It said that the people are entitled to demand security, financial, economic, and social stability, but they are being obstructed by not only Hizbullah's arms, but the government “that has done nothing but aggravate the people's problems.”

Comments 11
Thumb ado.australia 07 November 2012, 16:47

How can there be a formation of new government, without dialogue?
Who still listens to these ridicules comments?

Thumb andre.jabbour 07 November 2012, 21:03

Are you calling our president ridiculous? Our president is the best one we got for the past two decades, and probably one of the best ones ever.

Thumb thepatriot 08 November 2012, 12:22

let's not get carried away now andre...sleiman has been in a coma for years...he is barely waking up...we expect A LOT more from a president...

Missing helicopter 08 November 2012, 04:44

Just like the current Government was formed without dialogue .... all they had to do is disperse the black-shirted H.A men throughout Beirut to send a message and then M8 Government was formed. So the precedent is there that dialogue is not necessary to form one.

Missing peace 07 November 2012, 17:26

how can there be a dialogue with preconditions to it? lol

Missing hitech 07 November 2012, 20:21

You have to give Aoun credit, what he said was right. If M14 MPs do not want to participate in political life, they should resign.

If they want to change the government, the only civilized way to do this is through the parliament. The moment Miqati knows he does not have the support of more than 50% of the goverment and will be removed, he will resign. However at this point in time, nothing warrants a change in government. What is needed is the arrest and questioning of Hassan Nasrallah because he either did or knows who did the latest killings (and most likely all the ones from 2005).

Missing helicopter 08 November 2012, 04:47

hitech... I thought M8 pioneered the uncivilized ways of bringing down Governments. Occupying public land, Setting up tents for years in sensitive Downtown areas and shutting the Parliament closed for years are only few examples of their methods to bring down Governments.

Default-user-icon Lambasto Bombadjian (Guest) 07 November 2012, 20:58

Hey guys and dolls of March 14, mark your notebooks, warriors. The new keyword for this critical phase of Lebanon's future that rests on your shoulders is this: SOVEREIGNTY! I have no idea how we could have gone on for decades without fresh slogans every couple of months! No wonder we have had nothing but problems. But with your perseverance, this shall come to an end, my compatriots. Now, how better to enforce Lebanon's sovereignty than with the help of the long-time issuers of cartes blanches to every enemy of Lebanon: France, the US and Saudi Arabia? God bless such friends, my heroes. God bless you and god bless your enviable brand of sovereignty. Keep up the good work!

Thumb thepatriot 08 November 2012, 12:19

Oh...I see Lambasto... so...let me get this right, it is fine to be "the border of Iran" (Ahmadinejad), it is fine for the the El Assad family to occupy us, steal from us, humiliate us, torture us, kill us,...it is fine to have Iran decide of the fate of our entire country or population, BUT...it is wrong from the west to try and maintain stability in Lebanon... What does the west want yaaaa zaki!? It is certainly not trade with Lebanon, our resources, or gold! Think now...even a teen ager can answer that!

Default-user-icon Fazlo Bakkadji (Guest) 08 November 2012, 14:59

Read, read and then read. And then ask your daddy to explain. And then ask your mommy to double check just in case daddy is like you. And then ask your teacher to explain just in case you, daddy and mommy are all alike. And then... what can one say when someone can read but cannot really read?

Thumb thepatriot 08 November 2012, 12:20

like may 7th you mean?