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President Michel Suleiman voiced on Wednesday his satisfaction with the restoration of calm throughout Lebanon after a day of protests against the appointment of Najib Miqati as prime minister-designate.
He commended the security forces for their role in controlling the situation on the ground and maintaining the peace.
Full StoryThe March 14 general-secretariat announced on Wednesday its rejection of a future government that aims at abolishing the international tribunal and tolerating weapons.
“We won’t accept the cabinet because it will come to abolish the court and tolerate weapons,” said general-secretariat coordinator Fares Soaid.
Full StoryTwo prominent Saudi writers criticized outgoing Lebanese premier Saad Hariri in editorials published on Wednesday, saying his supporters used sectarian language and acted like Hizbullah with violent protests.
In an editorial in Saudi-owned al-Hayat entitled "The Lebanese Opposition Cloned,” Daud al-Shiryan wrote that Hariri's bloc, which is backed by Saudi Arabia, had "used the same methods" on Tuesday as his opponents in Hizbullah and allied parties.
Full StoryFree Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun stressed on Wednesday that Sunnis will support the March 8 forces even if the other team rejected to participate in the new government.
“If the other team refuses to participate with us in the cabinet, that would be its choice, but Sunnis will be with us,” Aoun told a news conference in Rabiyeh following talks with Premier-designate Najib Miqati.
Full StoryA tense calm returned to Lebanon on Wednesday after violent daylong demonstrations across the country left 45 people wounded.
An-Nahar newspaper on Wednesday said among the injured was 35 Lebanese army soldiers, two policemen and 8 civilians.
Full StoryThe Saudi Foreign Ministry advised its citizens not to travel to Lebanon at this stage as Ambassador Ali Awad Assiri denied to pan-Arab daily al-Hayat that the embassy had asked Saudis to leave the country as soon as possible.
“Given the situation in Lebanon, the Foreign Ministry advises Saudi citizens not to travel to Lebanon at this stage and until calm and stability” are restored, said a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency.
Full StoryFormer Prime Minister Saad Hariri believed that whoever killed his father does not want him to be in power.
“Whoever killed Rafik Hariri in 2005 doesn’t want Saad Hariri to be in power,” Hariri said in an interview with the New York Times.
Full StoryIsraeli Deputy Prime Minister Silvan Shalom reportedly said Wednesday that the international community should take steps to prevent Hizbullah from controlling Lebanon.
Israel radio quoted Shalom as saying that the situation in Lebanon is dangerous because Iran controls Hizbullah’s movements.
Full StoryPrime Minister-designate Najib Miqati, who has vowed to maintain national unity, will start consultations to form a new government after President Michel Suleiman appointed him Lebanon's new premier.
Miqati's appointment on Tuesday came amid a "day of rage" by fellow Sunnis who accused him of being a traitor to his sect and betraying former PM Saad Hariri.
Full StoryProgressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat denied he came under pressure to name Najib Miqati for the premier’s post and criticized as “political dementia” accusations that the prime minister-designate represents the Faqih rule.
“I haven’t come under pressure from anyone, neither from Syria nor from Hizbullah,” Jumblat told As Safir daily about his decision to nominate Miqati rather than Saad Hariri.
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