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Lebanon without govt as Syria simmers

Published: 24 Mar 2013 - 04:25 am | Last Updated: 02 Feb 2022 - 11:12 pm


Rebels clash with Syrian government forces at Saif Al Dawla district in the northern city of Aleppo yesterday.

BEIRUT: Lebanon was without a government yesterday after the surprise resignation of premier Najib Mikati and as it battled deep divisions fuelled by the civil war in neighbouring Syria.

The head of the government in which the Shia movement Hezbollah, a key ally of Damascus, holds powerful sway, formally submitted its resignation yesterday to President Michel Sleiman who asked that it continue in a caretaker capacity.

Mikati announced his government’s resignation late on Friday, citing divisions on domestic issues, and called for a national unity government.

“I announce the resignation of the government, hoping that this will open the way for the major political blocs to take responsibility and come together to bring Lebanon out of the unknown,” Mikati said.

He called for the “formation of a national salvation government in which all Lebanese political forces are represented in order to save the nation.”

Mikati became prime minister in 2011, positioning himself as a moderate.

He headed a government dominated by the so-called March 8 coalition, made up of Hezbollah and its allies, and drew fire from Sunnis who accused him of betraying his community and siding with the Syria- and Iran-backed group.

Although the government had officially adopted a policy of “disassociation” from the Syrian conflict, Syria is probably the real reason why it has fallen.

Until 2005, Lebanon was dominated politically and militarily by Damascus.

Mikati’s government was constantly criticised by the March 14 movement led by former premier Saad Hariri, an opponent of President Bashar Al Assad’s regime, and his Christian partners from the Lebanese Forces of Samir Geagea.

Mikati’s decision to step down came after disagreements on two domestic issues — an elections supervisory commission and extending a security chief’s mandate.

The 57-year-old was involved in a contentious bid to extend the term of the Sunni head of Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces, General Ashraf Rifi, which was opposed by a majority of the government.

“In a few days a major security institution risks falling into the void when its director general retires. I felt that during this sensitive period that he should stay in office... but I found that the council of ministers does not share my opinion on this,” he said in announcing his resignation.

Rifi, a Sunni and opponent of Syria, was a thorn in Hezbollah’s side.

His officers were involved in the investigation that led to the indictment by the International Criminal Court of four Hezbollah members for their alleged role in the murder of former premier Rafiq Hariri in 2005.

Another bone of contention was Mikati’s insistence on holding an election in June but before a move by Christian parties to change an electoral law that they feel is detrimental to their community.

The daily Al Nahar, close to the opposition that is hostile to Damascus, expected a “protracted crisis,” while Al Akhbar on the opposite of the political divide said Mikati’s resignation “means the end of the policy of disassociation.”

“This resignation plan can expect to have security repercussions not only on the border with Syria, but also within Lebanon. The political chaos will last a long time,” it said.

Fierce sectarian clashes in which fighters used machineguns and mortars erupted yesterday in the flashpoint northern city of Tripoli, killing one Alawite, and wounding an Alawite and a Sunni, a security source said.

Intermittent battles pit Alawites belonging to the same sect as Syria’s Assad against Sunnis, who back Syria’s insurgents.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton voiced concern at the “deteriorating situation,” while UN chief Ban Ki-moon called on the Lebanese to unite and maintain their policy of “disassociation” from the Syrian conflict. AFP\

Syria rebels seize key military base

BEIRUT: Rebels fighting the regime of President Bashar Al Assad yesterday seized a key air base in the southern Syrian province of Daraa after two weeks of fierce battles with loyalist troops, a watchdog said.
Meanwhile, in Damascus’s ancient Umayyad mosque, thousands of Assad supporters attended the funeral of pro-regime Sunni cleric Mohamed Saeed Al Bouti and his grandson, who died in a Thursday suicide bombing that killed some 50 people.
“Opposition fighters loyal to Al Nusra Front, Al Yarmuk Brigade and other rebel groups seized air defence Base 38 near the town of Saida, on the road linking Damascus to Amman, in the province of Daraa,” said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The seizure came “after 16 days of fighting,” said the Britain-based group.
At least seven rebels were killed in their final assault on the base, said the Observatory, which also documented the deaths of at least eight regime troops including an officer. AFP