Lebanon in Deeper Political Turmoil (Government) Lebanon in Deeper Political Turmoil (Government)

Lebanon in Deeper Political Turmoil (Government‪)‬

The Weekly Middle East Reporter (Beirut, Lebanon) 2011, Jan 15, 138, 1233

    • £2.99
    • £2.99

Publisher Description

Lebanon's months-long political crisis over a UN-backed court's indictment into the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri took a dangerous twist this week with the collapse of the country's national unity Cabinet. A precedent in Lebanon's politically turbulent history, the collapse of the Cabinet under pressure from the powerful Shiite Hizbullah group and its allies has thrown Lebanon into deeper political turmoil, raising questions about whether the country's feuding parties would be able to agree on a new government soon to face a protracted political crisis. Given the deep-rooted political differences between the Hizbullah-led opposition bloc, as the Syrian-backed March 8 alliance is known, and the rival pro-Western ruling March 14 coalition, in addition to the failure of the Saudi-Syrian efforts to resolve the Lebanese crisis, it is highly unlikely that Lebanon can have a new government soon. It took Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri nearly five months to form his current Cabinet on November 9, 2009 following parliamentary elections in which he emerged as the majority leader. "Lebanon has entered starting yesterday (January 12) a new phase that will be open to a long-term and deep political and Cabinet crisis following the failure of Syrian-Saudi efforts to achieve results," said the leftist newspaper AS SAFIR, which is close to Hizbullah and Syria, on January 13. AN NAHAR's columnist Ali Hamadeh wrote in his column on January 13: "Lebanon has entered a dangerous crossroads. The independence-seeking people (March 14 groups) will have nothing but to stand fast in the face of 'dark forces' here and across the border, waiting for truth and justice."

GENRE
Reference
RELEASED
2011
15 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
6
Pages
PUBLISHER
The Middle East Reporter
SIZE
60.8
KB

More Books Like This

Paralysis Spreads Throughout Govt As No Cabinet Session is in Sight--Speculation About New Govt; Hariri Under Intense Pressure--No Movement on Syria-Saudi Inititiave--Gemayel Calls on Lebanese Factions to Return to the 'National Dialogue Table'--Geagea Says STL and Hariri are 'Two Red Lines' (Lebanon-Politics) Paralysis Spreads Throughout Govt As No Cabinet Session is in Sight--Speculation About New Govt; Hariri Under Intense Pressure--No Movement on Syria-Saudi Inititiave--Gemayel Calls on Lebanese Factions to Return to the 'National Dialogue Table'--Geagea Says STL and Hariri are 'Two Red Lines' (Lebanon-Politics)
2011
Lebanon Caught Between U.N. Commitments and Internal Splits (DIVISIONS) Lebanon Caught Between U.N. Commitments and Internal Splits (DIVISIONS)
2011
Syrian-Saudi Package Reported to Resolve Lebanese Political Crisis--Package Includes Rejection of Indictment Against Any Lebanese Party--Full Implementation of Taif and Doha Accords (LEBANON-POLITICS) Syrian-Saudi Package Reported to Resolve Lebanese Political Crisis--Package Includes Rejection of Indictment Against Any Lebanese Party--Full Implementation of Taif and Doha Accords (LEBANON-POLITICS)
2011
Heated Debate on Special Tribunal Expected in Parliament Next Week--March 14 Group to Take Decisive Position at Meeting Sunday--Nasrallah Prepares for Confrontation in Speech Saturday Evening--Lebanon Begins Search for Hariri Murder Suspects--Ban Ki-Moon Urges Beirut to Resume National Dialogue "ASAP" (LEBANON-STL) Heated Debate on Special Tribunal Expected in Parliament Next Week--March 14 Group to Take Decisive Position at Meeting Sunday--Nasrallah Prepares for Confrontation in Speech Saturday Evening--Lebanon Begins Search for Hariri Murder Suspects--Ban Ki-Moon Urges Beirut to Resume National Dialogue "ASAP" (LEBANON-STL)
2011
Future of Lebanon in the Balance; Presidential Consultations will Decide--Two Rival Programs Race to Dominate the Country--Jumblat Joins Syria and Hizbullah to Exclude Hariri--Implications of a Hizbullah-Dominated Regime (Lebanon-Politics) Future of Lebanon in the Balance; Presidential Consultations will Decide--Two Rival Programs Race to Dominate the Country--Jumblat Joins Syria and Hizbullah to Exclude Hariri--Implications of a Hizbullah-Dominated Regime (Lebanon-Politics)
2011
Tensions Reach Climax with J. Sayyed's Return to Hizbullah's Protection--Storming of Beirut Airport Seen As Bid to Take over State Institutions--Saudi-Syrian Mediation Seen Only Hope to Prevent "Disaster"- (Lebanon-Politics) Tensions Reach Climax with J. Sayyed's Return to Hizbullah's Protection--Storming of Beirut Airport Seen As Bid to Take over State Institutions--Saudi-Syrian Mediation Seen Only Hope to Prevent "Disaster"- (Lebanon-Politics)
2010

More Books by The Weekly Middle East Reporter (Beirut, Lebanon)

Iran and Iraq: Oil Wars (Resource Conflict) Iran and Iraq: Oil Wars (Resource Conflict)
2010
Terrorism (Mideast-Report) Terrorism (Mideast-Report)
2011
Obama's New Secret Wars (Yemen-Terrorism) Obama's New Secret Wars (Yemen-Terrorism)
2011
Security Breaches Aggravated by Political Vacuum (Lebanon-Report: Security) Security Breaches Aggravated by Political Vacuum (Lebanon-Report: Security)
2009
Libya's Stolen Revolution? (Islamists-Ntc) Libya's Stolen Revolution? (Islamists-Ntc)
2011
New Constitution (Morocco-Report) New Constitution (Morocco-Report)
2011