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Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri would not postpone Wednesday's session, except on one condition.
Berri assured that the 12th session to elect a president would be held on time, unless Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi asked him to postpone it.
Full StoryThe Lebanese Forces’ Strong Republic parliamentary bloc has stressed the need that Wednesday’s presidential election session be “the final session leading to the election of a new president,” holding those who might block quorum responsible for “the continued vacuum and its financial and political repercussions on the country.”
The bloc also deplored “the intimidating rhetoric coming from some political forces that want to impose their candidate contrary to the parliamentary balance of power, speaking of a conspiracy, persecution and isolation, whereas the conspiracy lies in blocking the presidential vote and undermining stability and order.”
Full StoryEx-president Michel Aoun on Monday criticized Hezbollah for launching “treason accusations and threats through newspapers.”
“I did not let them down, neither in the July War, nor in keenness on the resistance nor in the confrontation against Daesh (Islamic State group),” Aoun said in an interview with the journalist Sami Kleib, when asked whether a mending of ties between Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement is possible.
Full StoryMP Walid al-Baarini of the largely-Sunni National Moderation bloc has said that the grouping of lawmakers will attend Wednesday’s presidential election session without voting for Suleiman Franjieh or Jihad Azour.
“Amid the current alignments, the bloc will only take part in the elections through a consensual candidate on whom most parliamentary blocs would agree,” Baarini told the al-Anbaa news portal of the Progressive Socialist Party.
Full StoryThe head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, MP Mohammed Raad, on Monday accused the rival camp of “using” ex-minister Jihad Azour to block the election of “the candidate of the resistance,” in reference to Marada Movement chief Suleiman Franjieh.
“The people of the resistance are being competed against by a group of Lebanese who are nominating and backing a person whom they don’t want to be elected as president. They are only using him to block the election of the candidate of the resistance,” Raad said.
Full StoryLebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea has accused the Axis of Defiance of over-reacting to the nomination of former minister Jihad Azour.
"They called him Tel Aviv's candidate and an American conspiracy between the LF and the Free Patriotic Movement," Geagea told Nidaa al-Watan newspaper, in remarks published Monday.
Full StoryEx-president and Free Patriotic Movement founder Michel Aoun has stressed that “our system is democratic and our constitution protects freedom of opinion.”
“Accordingly, every political party has the right to have a presidential candidate, without that drawing a rhetoric of treason accusations and threats of biblical proportions,” Aoun tweeted.
Full StoryMaronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Monday stressed that running for president and nominating a president are “democratic and constitutional” rights.
“Respecting the dignities of candidates is an ethical and essential right in order to live together in peace, confidence and cooperation for the sake of our same country,” al-Rahi added.
Full StoryInternational Monetary Fund official Jihad Azour, who has been nominated for the long-vacant Lebanese presidency, said Monday that his nomination is not aimed at challenging anyone but is rather a call for unity and breaking alignments.
On Sunday, the Shiite Duo's candidate Suleiman Franjieh said that Azour is the son of the establishment as he had served as a finance minister in the Fouad Saniora's government from 2005 to 2008.
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Marada Movement chief Suleiman Franjieh on Sunday said he has not “imposed” himself on anyone as a presidential candidate, adding that he has “no problem” in “agreeing on a patriotic and unifying candidate.”
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