Israel's plan to pull its troops out of northern Ghajar, a disputed village on the flashpoint border with Lebanon, is likely to prove more of a headache than a political victory for Beirut, experts say.
"The people of Ghajar do not want to be part of Lebanon," said Timur Goksel, former senior adviser of the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), of the village's 2,200 residents -- none of whom is Lebanese.
Full StoryPhalange Party leader Amin Gemayel on Sunday stressed that "Hizbullah's approach has become well-known – an approach of dictation and intimidation."
Hizbullah "wants all initiatives to be in service of its interests," Gemayel told Voice of Lebanon Radio.
Full StorySources monitoring the contacts between Riyadh and Damascus noted that a race is underway between the indictment in the Special Tribunal for Lebanon and the solutions proposed by the Saudi-Syrian efforts over which one will be released first.
They told An Nahar Sunday that the efforts would have reached a positive conclusion had it not been for Saudi King Abdullah's recent medical setback.
Full StorySyrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal al-Moqdad stated that Lebanese-Syrian ties "cannot be normal if the situation in Lebanon is not normal," reported the Kuwaiti al-Rai newspaper on Sunday.
He said: "Syria will not interfere in Lebanon in the interests of any side and the Lebanese officials are responsible for their country."
Full StoryMustaqbal MP Ahmed Fatfat stressed that Interior Minister Ziad Baroud's decision to take disciplinary measures against Internal Security Forces chief Ashraf Rifi came in light of the minister's lax approach in defending the ISF.
Fatfat told the daily al-Mustaqbal Sunday: "It seems that Baroud is taking measures that appear as a political position or opinion."
Full StoryJustice Minister Ibrahim Najjar stressed on Sunday the importance of convening Cabinet as there are several dangerous and vital matters that need to be addressed and appointments that should be approved.
He said that obstructing state functioning should no longer continue.
Full StoryHouse Speaker Nabih Berri was planning to boycott the launch of the new judicial year on Monday after President Michel Suleiman suggested during his recent consultations that the false witnesses file be discussed at the National Dialogue after failing to discuss it during Cabinet.
Suleiman was quick to clarify, through his sources, that he was not behind this suggestion, reported the daily An Nahar Sunday.
Full StoryState Minister Jean Oghassabian stated that the March 14 forces consider the false witnesses file to be a political issue in Lebanon.
He told the daily An Nahar in an interview on Sunday that there are several issues that have been put on hold that require discussion, adding: "Some priorities are proposed before Cabinet and Prime Minister Saad Hariri and President Michel Suleiman have the right to coordinate between each other to address them."
Full StoryLebanon filed a complaint with the U.N. Security Council on Saturday over an Israeli device found in south Lebanon to spy on Hizbullah’s private telecommunications network.
Hizbullah said Friday that it discovered the device which exploded after apparently being detonated remotely by the Israelis near the village of Majdel Selem, about 8 kilometers from the border with Israel.
Full StorySyria's alleged interference in Lebanon and its increasingly sophisticated weapons shipments to Hizbullah have alarmed U.S. officials and prompted Israel's military to consider a strike against a Syrian arms depot, U.S. and Israeli officials told The Washington Post.
But Israel has so far hesitated to take military action out of concern that such a strike could touch off a conflict even bloodier than the 2006 war, said an Israeli military official.
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