Adib Bids to Form Crisis Cabinet within Two Weeks

Prime minister designate Mustafa Adib was to kick off talks Wednesday on forming Lebanon's crisis government within two weeks to begin enacting desperately needed reforms in the disaster-hit country.
Government formation is usually a drawn-out process in multi-confessional Lebanon where a complex political system seeks to share power between different religious groups.
But a traumatic explosion at Beirut port last month has created intense pressure for swift reforms to lift the country out of its worst economic crisis in decades.
The last government, only in power since the start of the year, resigned in the wake of the August 4 explosion that killed at least 188, wounded thousands and laid waste to entire districts of the capital.
With the clock ticking, Adib was to meet the parliament speaker, former prime ministers and parliamentary bloc representatives.
Lebanon lawmakers rushed to approve the nomination of the little-known 48-year-old diplomat Monday on the eve of a high-profile visit by French President Emmanuel Macron.
Visiting to mark the centenary of the former French protectorate, Macron Tuesday said all sides had pledged to help Adib form a cabinet within two weeks.
He promised to host two conferences in Paris in the second half of October -- one to help drum up aid and the other to discuss political reform.
He said he would be back in Lebanon in December for a progress report.
US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, David Schenker, was due in Lebanon Wednesday to "urge Lebanese leaders to implement reforms that respond to the Lebanese people's desire for transparency, accountability, and a government free of corruption", the embassy said.
A protest movement, which has taken to the streets since last October demanding the ouster of the political elite, has already rejected Adib's nomination.
Hundreds protested on Tuesday evening demanding a secular state to replace the decades-old sectarian system, with clashes erupting in the evening between some demonstrators and security forces.
Lebanon's worst economic crunch since the 1975-1990 civil war has seen poverty rates double to more than half the population, sent prices soaring and trapped people's savings in the banks.

What a shame...
He is to meet with Berri, the previous Prime Ministers, the Heads of Blocks, the Heads of party...
He should meet with non of those people of the past. Why is their opinion valuable. they are all losers, and people from the past.
He should form his government and present the project to the President, and that's it! Take it or leave it!
He should reject all pressure, all name dropping by other parties, and start something new and never done in the Past by deciding ALONE!

This guy lives abroad and understands that when the traffic light is Red you stop, at yellow you slow down and green you go. Unlike the corrupt politicians that are more important than the ambulance and have the right to Harrass people when the light is red

Let's see about that... still he was chosen by the sulta.. my personal trust level is at 0...