Khazen

Lebanon PM Forms Govt to Lead Country to May Polls

By Lin Noueihed  BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon’s prime minister formed a new government on Tuesday, boosting chances that a general election can be held on time in line with demands by the international community and anti-Syrian opposition.  In a key concession to the opposition after seven weeks of deadlock, Najib Mikati, a wealthy businessman with close ties to Lebanon’s long-time political master Syria, said he would immediately seek the removal of pro-Syrian security chiefs. Comprising largely businessmen and technocrats, Mikati’s 14-member cabinet must now win a confidence vote in parliament and draft and steer through the assembly an electoral law, all within 10 days, if the polls are to be held by the end of May.

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Exiled Christian politician ready to assume Lebanese presidency

PARIS (AFP) – Lebanon’s exiled Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun told AFP in an interview that he would be ready to assume his country’s presidency should national consensus emerge after May elections. “The job that goes to the Christians (in the Lebanese political system) is that of president of the Republic,” he told AFP. “If there is a national consensus, I will assume my responsibilities at that time,” he added. “Without such a consensus, I will not stand as a candidate.” Aoun, 70, is one of the key figures of the Lebanese opposition leading the campaign seeking to end Syria’s political and military dominance of the country.

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Cardinals Again Fail to Elect New Pope

By WILLIAM J. KOLE, Associated Press Writer  VATICAN CITY – Black smoke emerged from the Sistine Chapel chimney again Tuesday as the scarlet-robed cardinals inside failed in two more ballots to elect a new pope to build on John Paul II’s legacy and heal deep rifts within the Roman Catholic Church. Several thousand pilgrims and tourists who packed St. Peter’s Square to stare at the slender stovepipe jutting from the chapel’s brown tiled rooftop gasped when the smoke appeared just before noon. The 115 voting cardinals sequestered in the chapel were to break for lunch and reconvene in the afternoon for the day’s final session of secret balloting. White smoke

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Former Lebanese minister dies from injuries in Hariri blast

BEIRUT – Former Lebanese minister Bassel Fleihan died on Monday in a French hospital from wounds sustained in the February blast that killed ex-premier Rafiq Hariri in Beirut, the Hariri TV television station said. Fleihan, 42, died in a military hospital near Paris where he had been taken with serious burns immediately after the February 14 bombing in Beirut, the television reported before interrupting programs to play classical music.His death brings the toll from the blast to 20, including Hariri.A tent had been set up on Beirut

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New Lebanese premier vows transparency

Najib Mikati, a pro-Syrian, chosen with opposition support. BEIRUT, Lebanon (CNN) — Pro-Syrian Lebanese President Emile Lahoud has named former government minister Najib Mikati as prime minister-designate.Mikati, also pro-Syrian, has garnered the support of the anti-Syrian Lebanese opposition by vowing to fire the nation’s security chiefs in the wake of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri’s assassination.He promised to act in a fair and transparent manner during the process of forming a new government and called the opposition’s backing of him a “wise decision.” “We should take advantage of this opportune moment and deal seriously our difficult times,” Mikati told reporters shortly after his appointment was made public.

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Lebanese opposition leaders, once wartime foes, meet in Paris

PARIS (AFP) – Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt met here for the first time in 20 years with his former wartime archfoe and now an ally in the opposition, exiled former Prime minister and army leader Michel Aoun, a spokesman for Aoun told AFP.  The two men “called for the opposition to join the government that will be formed soon under prime minister designate Nagib Miqati,” said spokesman Simon Abiramia. “They insisted that the opposition needs to be united in order to achieve common goals” during the 30-minute meeting in Aoun’s Paris residence, he said. Jumblatt, who has been on a visit to France since Wednesday, and Aoun are two key figures of the Lebanese opposition leading the campaign seeking to end Syria’s military and political dominance of the country.

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Najib Mikati Named Lebanon Prime Minister

By SAM F. GHATTAS, Associated Press Writer  BEIRUT, Lebanon – Lebanon’s president on Friday named moderate pro-Syrian lawmaker Najib Mikati as prime minister, breaking a political deadlock and reviving chances for holding parliamentary elections next month. The announcement came two days after Prime Minister-designate Omar Karami ended his efforts to form a Cabinet after nearly seven weeks. Mikati, an opposition-backed former public works minister, won the position after President Emile Lahoud polled legislators or their representatives from the 128-member parliament. Lahoud consulted with the speaker of parliament about the results and then summoned Mikati to the presidential palace and asked him to form the next government, said presidential spokesman Rafik Shalala.

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Lebanon Holds Talks on New PM, U.S. Urges Speed

By Nadim Ladki  BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon’s pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud began consultations with parliamentarians on Friday to name a new prime minister to lead the country to a general election set for May. Political sources said the selection of the new prime minister was now a two-horse race between outgoing Defense Minister Abdel Rahim Mrad, a staunch ally of Damascus, and the more moderate former minister Najib Mikatti, a wealthy businessman with close ties to Syria. Lebanon has been without a government since Feb. 28, two weeks after the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri plunged the country into its worst political crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.

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Lebanon’s Pro-Syrian Coalition in Disarray

(Reuters) – Lebanon’s pro-Syrian political coalition was in disarray on Thursday, with a key figure saying he could no longer work with President Emile Lahoud, another top ally of Damascus. Tensions boiled over a day after Prime Minister Omar Karami stepped down after he failed to agree a cabinet with pro-Syrian allies, deepening the worst political crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. With Syrian forces streaming out of Lebanon in line with an April 30 deadline for an end to Damascus’s 29-year-old military and intelligence presence, its allies in Beirut are increasingly squabbling over how to move forward.

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