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Lebanon to get new national unity government in days

By Reuters - Dec 18,2018 - Last updated at Dec 18,2018

Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad Al Hariri speaks to the media in front of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon ahead of the closing arguments in the trial of Lebanon's Rafik Al Hariri alleged killers in the Hague,The Netherlands, on September 11 (Reuters photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon is on track to form a new national unity government in the next few days, politicians said on Tuesday, raising hopes for an end to more than seven months of wrangling that has darkened the outlook for its struggling economy.

Efforts to form the new government, led by Prime Minister-designate Saad Al Hariri, have been obstructed by conflicting demands for Cabinet seats that must be parceled out in line with a finely balanced, sectarian political system.

Heavily indebted and suffering from a stagnant economy, Lebanon is in dire need of an administration that can set about long-stalled reforms to put public debt on a sustainable footing.

“Matters are moving quickly and if things stay like this without obstacles — and I don’t expect obstacles — the government will soon see the light,” Major General Abbas Ibrahim, a top security official involved in efforts to end the impasse, said in a televised news conference.

Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil told Reuters the process was “in the last phase and it is probable that the government will be formed before the Christmas holiday”. “This will leave a positive impact on the financial and economic situation, and open the way for a start to dealing this file,” he added.

Fitch Ratings on Tuesday changed Lebanon’s outlook to negative from stable, citing a further deterioration in government deficits and debt dynamics and signs of rising pressures on Lebanon’s financing model.

The May 6 national election, Lebanon’s first in nine years, produced a parliament tilted in favour of the heavily armed, Iran-backed Shiite Muslim group Hizbollah, which together with its political allies won more than 70 of the 128 seats.

Hariri, who enjoys Western backing, lost more than one third of his lawmakers, though he remained Lebanon’s biggest Sunni Muslim leader and as such was nominated again as prime minister.

His Future Movement said it was now possible “to wager” on the government being formed before the holidays, saying this was “a pressing matter” due to “economic and financial challenges”.

 

Compromise

 

Efforts to form the government have faced a series of obstacles, the last of which surrounded Sunni representation, with Hizbollah demanding a Cabinet seat for one of its Sunni allies to reflect their election gains.

Hariri has resisted the demand.

But under a compromise that has taken shape, the Hizbollah-linked Sunnis are expected to be represented in government by a candidate acceptable to them rather than insisting that they themselves should get the seat.

In exchange, they say they want Harir i to acknowledge their political standing as a group of Sunnis independent of his Future Movement by meeting them. The Hariri family has dominated Lebanese Sunni politics for decades.

“Within two or three days — God willing — you will hear the news that the Lebanese masses were waiting for,” Abdel Rahim Mrad, one of the pro-Hizbollah Sunni MPs, said after meeting Ibrahim. “All the problems have been solved.”

The Sunni minister is expected to be named among a group of ministers allotted to President Michel Aoun, a compromise on the part of his Free Patriotic Movement (FPM). “Every solution requires a concession and everybody has conceded,” Gebran Bassil, the head of the FPM and Aoun’s son-in-law, said.

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