Premier Najib Miqati has promised U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon to pay Lebanon’s full share of funds to the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, a high-ranking diplomat said.
The diplomat told An Nahar daily published Saturday that Miqati’s pledge came during an unannounced meeting he held with Ban on the sidelines of the Friends of Libya conference in Paris earlier in the month.

During his meeting with Prime Minister Najib Miqati on Friday, Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi told the premier that he had asked French President Nicolas Sarkozy to convince ex-PM Saad Hariri to return to Beirut and reconcile with Miqati, MTV and LBC television networks reported.
“I am ready for any positive step,” MTV quoted Miqati as telling al-Rahi.

Two Internal Security Forces Information Branch officers were injured at dawn Friday when armed men opened fire on their patrol at the Jlala bridge-Chtaura in the Western Bekaa, the National News Agency reported.
NNA said the two-vehicle patrol came under fire from three gunmen riding a Mercedes that turned out to be stolen. One of the patrol’s vehicles, a Nissan, was riddled with bullets.

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea will attend a meeting of Maronite political leaders scheduled to be held in Bkirki later this month after the storm sparked by the controversial statements of Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi subsided, high-ranking LF sources said.
“There will be no problem in our participation at the Bkirki meeting on Sept. 23 after the ‘summer cloud’ that al-Rahi’s remarks created have passed,” the sources told An Nahar newspaper published Friday.

President Michel Suleiman’s support for Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi was seen as a response to local and foreign criticism of the prelate over his controversial statements on Hizbullah’s arms and Syria, An Nahar daily said Friday.
Suleiman visited al-Rahi at his summer residence in Diman on Thursday. He said the patriarch does not need anyone to defend him against the statements that he made during a visit to Paris earlier this month.

Speaker Nabih Berri will most probably refer the electricity draft law to parliament for approval on Thursday despite the failure of the joint parliamentary committees to approve the controversial $1.2 billion bill, his sources said.
The sources told As Safir daily that the next meeting of the committees on Monday will be the last no matter what results the MPs reach. Berri could call for a parliamentary session next Thursday to approve the bill, they said.

The March 14-led opposition has denied that it is seeking to propose a draft law in parliament to fund the Special Tribunal for Lebanon if the government fails to take such an action.
MPs Marwan Hamadeh and George Adwan and March 14 general-secretariat coordinator Fares Soaid told An Nahar daily on Friday that the opposition is not mulling to propose a draft law.

Lebanese leaders have reached an “implicit understanding” to fund the international tribunal after receiving Western warnings about possible sanctions if Lebanon rejects to pay its share of funds, An Nahar daily reported Friday.
The newspaper said that President Michel Suleiman, Speaker Nabih Berri and Premier Najib Miqati have been informed by Western officials that any procrastination in the payment of Lebanon’s share would expose it to sanctions that could target its banking sector.

A unit from the Syrian army accidentally fired at the Lebanese army when the former infiltrated northern Lebanon on Thursday, reported the National News Agency.
It explained that a 15-member unit from the Syrian army entered Lebanon near the northern town of al-Mwanseh as it was following shepherds along the Lebanese-Syrian border.

Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri voiced on Thursday his support for the Lebanese people and their ability to defend Lebanon’s democratic system against all attempts to target it.
He said in a statement on the occasion of International Democracy Day: “We are voicing a concern over democracy today because of the threat of arms, which are democracy’s greatest enemy.”
