Abou Faour Pessimistic over Possible Consensus on Cabinet's Policy Statement

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Health Minister Wael Abou Faour expressed pessimism on Monday over reaching consensus among the rival parties on the cabinet's policy statement, in particular regarding the army-people-resistance equation and the ongoing war in Syria.

“All sides should offer compromises in order to reach common grounds,” Abou Faour said in an interview with An Nahar newspaper.

The minister, who is loyal to Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat, expressed belief that Prime Minister Tammam Salam's cabinet could be an appeasement and national unity government.

“The cabinet could at least organize the political dispute, fortify security and revive the economy,” Abou Faour pointed out.

On Friday, the committee drafting the ministerial policy statement failed anew to reach an agreement on the clause related to resisting Israel as the March 14 forces insisted on “the state's authority over everything.”

The committee's meeting was the seventh since Prime Minister Tammam Salam's cabinet was formed around two weeks ago.

Salam has announced that his government's mission is combating terrorism and preparing for the upcoming presidential election.

He considered that the main goal of Salam's cabinet is to carry out the upcoming presidential elections, reject any kind of vacuum at the state's higher post.

Asked about the mediation role that Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Michel Aoun is carrying out to bridge the gap between al-Mustaqal movement and Hizbuallah, Abou Faour praised the move.

“Aoun's endeavors will create further possibilities to reach consensus,” the minister pointed out.

He noted that Aoun's exerted efforts facilitates the role that the PSP is playing between the political arch-foes.

Aoun recently confirmed that he has recently met with former premier Saad Hariri and Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.

"If you want to make a mediation, you must talk to everyone. Hizbullah is not embarrassed of my rapprochement with Mustaqbal (Movement) and we will all be able to close ranks,” Aoun had said.

Concerning the recommencement of all-party talks, Abou Faour said that the “positive dynamic endeavors that accompanied the formation of the cabinet should be strengthened by the resumption of a serious and productive national dialogue.”

The last dialogue session was held on September 20, 2012.

Comments 7
Thumb popeye 03 March 2014, 08:52

bless Geagea for he could see this coming.

Default-user-icon Fred Rahmi (Guest) 03 March 2014, 09:39

Geagea is just an extremist rejectionist. He is offering no solutions. Just stands that are based on a lack of reality, whilst having no real solutions. This is just cheap politics.

Like the greens in Australia. They claim they will stop all forest industries to save the trees. They do this because they know they will never rule so they wont ever have to face the reality of the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs. Geagea, your killer idol, is just full of wind.

Default-user-icon Batman (Guest) 03 March 2014, 14:53

and ali baba nasralah and his pals are patriots Einstein, eh..? And they ahve no blood on their hands...right? what a hypocrite you are...

Default-user-icon trueself (Guest) 03 March 2014, 10:58

Let's not complicate things. It's simple. The resistance in Lebanon is only for the army and no one else's. All Lebanese are the same in the eyes of the law. Arms should only be in the hand of the army. All arms should be handed to the army which will defend Lebanon's borders from any aggression. Only an ignorant and brainless person wouldn't agree to this clear and logical statement.

Default-user-icon batman (Guest) 03 March 2014, 14:54

Right on bro...

Thumb -phoenix1 03 March 2014, 12:10

Mr. Abou faour is confirming what many of us feared would happen, that this new cabinet will not make it past birth.

Thumb -phoenix1 03 March 2014, 12:15

When the new cabinet was announced last month, even if it did not meet a substantial part of the required criteria, still, it raised a glimmer of hope for the Lebanese who after 10 months of stagnation and despair felt that then they had a solution extricated at the eleventh hour. For reasons so typical of the Lebanese staunch character of optimism, things somehow started to pick up, but now with the Policy Statement unable to come out plus the inherent disputes between the parties, it means that the little hope that started so embryonically is now literally evaporated into thin air. Added to the air of scepticism, Hezbollah's attacks on president Suleiman are now polarizing Lebanese society even further. I think we are in quicksands right now, unless everyone sobers up fast.