Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri condemned on Tuesday Iran’s position on the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, noting that it is “exactly” like Hizbullah’s.
He said in a statement: “The Iranian position is an integral part of a policy aimed at limiting the STL’s work and preventing justice from being achieved.”
Full StoryFree Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun stressed on Tuesday that he is committed to serving Lebanon, but “we will not remain in a government that lacks an agenda.”
He said after the Change and Reform bloc’s weekly meeting: “They can make do without us as we have other issues, such as the Resistance, that we are committed to.”
Full StoryThe head of the Democratic Renewal Movement form MP Nassib Lahoud stressed on Tuesday the movement’s objectivity towards various political powers in Lebanon, saying that it will not take sides with the March 8 or 14 camps.
He added however that it will “not maintain a neutral position on the current challenges” facing Lebanon.
Full StoryThe Iranian foreign ministry slammed on Tuesday as “illegitimate” allegations about Tehran’s involvement in former Premier Rafik Hariri’s assassination.
"We believe that reports on Rafik Hariri and his tribunal are in line with the international smear campaign and seek particular political goals,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said.
Full StoryHizbullah and the Progressive Socialist Party denied on Tuesday local and Arab media reports that the latter had deployed security and military units in some areas of Mount Lebanon aimed at destabilizing the ties between the two parties.
They said in a statement: “The relations between the two sides are well and they are seeking to bolster them through constant consultation and coordination.”
Full StoryA loud blast shook the neighborhood of Shiyyah in Beirut’s southern suburbs at dawn Monday, which the National News Agency said was the result of the explosion of a vehicle that suffered a technical malfunction.
Hizbullah and Amal members threw a security dragnet at the blast scene shortly after the explosion was heard at around 2:20 a.m., NNA said.
Full StorySyrian refugees are fleeing the crackdown in their towns into villages in northern Lebanon before sunset and returning at dawn to escape the raids launched overnight on their homes, the pan-Arab daily Asharq Awsat reported on Tuesday.
Sources told the newspaper that “more than 100 families are emigrating at sunset every day and temporarily from al-Qusayr, Heit, Bouiet and al-Soummaqiyat to the towns of Akroum, al-Nousoub, Houlwas, el-Kneisse and Wadi Khaled.”
Full StorySeven people were injured after a wealthy businessman’s prestige prevented him from accepting that a person from a lower social status sit at a front row during a condolences prayer in the south, the National News Agency reported.
NNA quoted several witnesses in the town of Buyout al-Siyyad in Tyre as saying on Monday that businessman A.Z. viewed a decision by another man to sit at a row in front of him as a challenge.
Full StoryPalestinian factions have taken precautionary measures to prevent the infiltration of Fatah al-Islam militants, who escaped from Roumieh prison over the weekend, into Palestinian camps in the north, the factions said in a statement.
They announced that joint security forces launched patrols at the Beddawi camp and closed all entrances to the shantytown.
Full StoryA delegation of Syrian expatriates in Lebanon headed by Dr. Jamal al-Mohsen on Monday visited the HQ of the U.N. Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) in downtown Beirut to deliver a letter addressed to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, state-run National News Agency reported.
“We, the members of the Syrian community in Lebanon, stress our absolute rejection of all forms of foreign interference in Syria’s domestic affairs and our adherence to the leadership of Mr. President Bashar Hafez al-Assad,” the delegation said in the letter.
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