Hariri Praises Suleiman, Says Miracle Needed to Stop Inevitable Vacuum
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةHead of al-Mustaqbal Movement Saad Hariri hailed on Saturday President Michel Suleiman, saying that the country “needs a political miracle to ensure electing a new head of state” ahead of the end of the outgoing president's six-year term.
“Few hours separate us from the constitutional deadline to elect a new president, which requires a political miracle to end the deadlock,” Hariri said in a statement issued by his press office.
He warned of the “dangerous threat if the top Christian post was left vacant.”
“There is no constitutional default causing this (presidential deadlock), or that prevents the rotation of power... The flaw lies in the failure to abide by the constitution and reaching consensus,” the statement stressed.
He urged the political arch-foes to end the stalemate, considering it “a serious threat against the democratic system that makes the presidency vulnerable and takes it to the unknown.”
The parliament failed anew on Thursday to elect a president in a fifth session of its kind, raising fears that the vacuum in the country's top Christian post would affect Lebanon's power-sharing agreement under which the president should be a Maronite, the premier a Sunni and the speaker a Shiite.
Hariri praised Suleiman, pointing out that he ruled the country “wisely” by insisting on adopting dialogue as “an essential way to resolve the political and sectarian tension.”
“Suleiman leaves office ending his term with an important political asset to what the presidency should be in the upcoming stage, mainly regarding the sovereignty of the state and the Baabda declaration,” the Sunni leader said.
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Hello Phoenix
Lebanon does not need a miracle. It needs a revolution to remove the current corrupt politicians running the country and taking it to the abyss
look at where we were and where we are right now. our politicians must be hung for hi crimes against the state and its people
Hi Coolmec, I wish a revolution in Lebanon, but by whom and against whom? I saw the news coming from Thailand where the military staged a coup and confined its politicians to barracks until they can solve their problems now months old, and I wished this was in Lebanon. Alas, our military is too weak, way too split and the militias are far more armed and individuals have more cash than the state, and what's worse, the people, yes the people have never thought as a people belonging to a nation but to parties, thus the highest attainable goal remains far short of a viable nation, farms maybe but not statehood, it's still hung up somehwre in 1043.
Cedre, the people who see a man like Aoun as a God will want to break even from God Himself, no surprises there, but Aoun will leave to see his frustration grow by the day, Baabda is a no go area for him and his likes nowadays. The minimum prerequisite as of now is for a man to fill Suleiman's shoes.
phoenix, even lots of LF/Kataeb people I speak to, are fed up of HibIran and dream of partition/federalism...
And they know that only a crisis will bring change and a new constitution...
leik heida leik. They throw their people into Chaos and live abroad with their Billions. tfeh
Min ne7na w min ento? What's the backround here? I thought the constitution states that the president is Christian, so what's the issue here?