Speaker Nabih Berri vowed on Wednesday to keep his centrist position on the differences between lawmakers over which electoral draft-law guarantees the best representation for all the Lebanese.
“The 1960 law is behind us and the Orthodox Gathering proposal in front of us,” he told An Nahar daily. “I will keep myself in the middle until the Lebanese reach consensus.”
Full StoryThe members of the March 14 opposition alliance, who have severely criticized the so-called Orthodox Gathering draft-law, warned again on Wednesday that the country would be shattered if parliament gives it the green light.
In remarks to al-Liwaa daily, March 14 independent Christian MP Butros Harb said he sought to convince Speaker Nabih Berri during a meeting of the joint parliamentary committees to postpone the approval of the proposal's 2nd article.
Full StoryPhalange Party leader Amin Gemayel is following up the case of Lebanese leftist militant Georges Abdallah, who has been jailed for nearly three decades in France, a local newspaper reported on Wednesday.
Sources close to the party told As Safir newspaper that the Christian leader is following up the case through diplomatic channels based on the “positive” signs that loomed recently.
Full StoryProgressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat lashed out at the adoption of so-called Orthodox Gathering electoral draft-law by the joint parliamentary committees on Tuesday, describing it as a “sad” day.
The “proposal takes us back to isolation and divides the Lebanese entity,” Jumblat said in comments to An Nahar newspaper on Wednesday.
Full StoryTwo years-old Momen Khaled al-Mohammed died on Tuesday from Meningitis after several Tripoli and northern hospitals refused to treat him because his family could not afford the cost of the care, the National News Agency reported on Tuesday.
"The child's parents went from one hospital to another but they were turned down for not being able to bear the cost of the treatment,” the NNA explained.
Full StoryA group of civil society activists staged a sit-in on Tuesday near the parliament in downtown Beirut to condemn the preliminary approval of a draft electoral law they believe will aggravate the sectarian tensions in Lebanon.
The youth organization of the Democratic Renewal Movement and the movement's secretary Antoine Haddad took part in the protest. Haddad warned that the Orthodox Gathering's electoral proposal -- under which each sect would elect its own representatives -- “would drag us several centuries into the past and strip Lebanese citizens of their right to vote for a candidate who doesn't belong to their own sect.”
Full StoryAl-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc slammed on Monday the joint parliamentary committees' adoption of the Orthodox Gathering's draft electoral law, expressing that it is a “black day in Lebanon's history”.
“Some MPs have abandoned Lebanon and its institutions today,” the bloc's released statement said after the lawmakers' weekly meeting. “It is a black day in Lebanon's legislative history”.
Full StoryFree Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun on Tuesday said “new realities” might emerge concerning ties with his Christian rivals, after they contributed to the joint parliamentary committees' approval of the controversial draft electoral law proposed by the Orthodox Gathering.
“Today is the brightest day in Lebanon's history because rights were returned to their owners without encroaching on the rights of others. The value of the votes of marginalized groups has been restored, that's why we're happy with this achievement,” Aoun told reporters after the weekly meeting of the Change and Reform in Rabiyeh.
Full StoryA cabinet session will be held at Baabda Palace instead of the Grand Serail on Wednesday given “the importance and the seriousness of the topics to be discussed”, the Turkish state-run Anadolu Agency reported on Tuesday.
Wednesday's session will try to contain the discontent over Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun's comments on the current situation in Bahrain.
Full StoryA statement attributed to the Free Syrian Army gave Hizbullah on Tuesday a 48-hour ultimatum to halt its alleged operations in Syrian territories, warning that it will retaliate to the sources of fire inside Lebanon.
“If Hizbullah didn't halt shelling Syrian territories, villages and civilians from Lebanese territories within 48 hours, we will strike back,” a statement attributed to the rebel FSA said.
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