Lebanon’s Army Commander Elected President
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Lebanon’s Army Commander Michel Suleiman was elected president by lawmakers on Sunday in a first step towards ending a long-running political crisis.
“Michel Suleiman got 118 votes and I declare him president of Lebanon,” Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said.
Of the 127 MPs who voted, six cast blank ballots and one voted for slain ex-premier Rafiq Hariri and several MPs killed in Lebanon since 2005.
One MP also voted for former MP Jean Obeid and another voted for majority ex-MP Nassib Lahoud.
Celebratory gunshots were fired into the air across Beirut following the announcement of the vote.(Naharnet-AFP)
From the AP - -
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Lebanon’s parliament has elected a president in a long-delayed vote that was a key step toward reconciling political factions.
The compromise candidate, army commander Gen. Michel Suleiman, ran unopposed. He won 118 votes of the 127 living members of the legislature on Sunday, according to parliament speaker Nabih Berri.
The vote has been postponed 19 times since November amid an 18-month political crisis between the Western-backed government and the Hezbollah-led opposition.
The political crisis recently turned violent and brought the country to the brink of civil war.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Lebanese flags and pictures of army chief Michel Suleiman adorned Beirut’s streets Sunday as parliament prepares to elect the consensus candidate as president — a key step toward reconciling Lebanese factions after a long political crisis.
Hundreds of police and army troops sealed off the capital’s downtown area, where lawmakers are scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. EDT to vote for the compromise choice of both the majority and opposition. Foreign dignitaries including Arab and European foreign ministers are expected to attend the session.
The vote has been postponed 19 times since November, when President Emile Lahoud stepped down without a successor. It comes after a deal brokered by Qatar after five days of talks there between Lebanon’s Western-backed government and the Hezbollah-led opposition.
Attendance will include representatives from both sides of the Middle East’s Sunni-Shiite divide: the foreign ministers of Syria and Iran, which support the Hezbollah-led opposition, and Saudi Arabia, a strong backer of Lebanon’s government.
Other dignitaries expected to attend Sunday’s session are the emir of Qatar, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana.
On the eve of the election, there was anticipation and much excitement across Lebanon.
The Lebanese flag — red and white with a Cedar tree in its middle — adorned almost every street and wall in parts of the country. Slogans welcoming the president-to-be, along with his pictures, stretched across highways leading to the capital.
The Arab-mediated Doha agreement reached Wednesday ended a standoff that had paralyzed Lebanon’s government before boiling over into the worst violence since the 1975-1990 civil war, leaving at least 67 people dead and at least 200 wounded.
Suleiman’s candidacy is unopposed, a compromise after the majority and the opposition withdrew their candidates. The army general bid farewell to fellow officers Saturday, and was expected to take off this uniform in a symbolic break with the military just after he is elected president.
The Qatar deal was a major victory for the Iranian-backed Hezbollah and its allies, who got their long-standing demand for veto power over all government decisions.
But most Lebanese just seem happy that the shadow of war has been lifted, at least for now.
Over the past two days, life has returned to Beirut’s upscale downtown district — a symbol of the city’s rebirth after it was devastated and rebuilt after the 15-year civil war. The area had turned into a virtual ghost town by a Hezbollah-led sit-in for the past 17 months.
Already it appears that the economy, battered by violence and uncertainty, is on the upswing. The stock market is up and, according to tourism officials, 750,000 Lebanese expatriates have booked summer vacations in Lebanon.
“Hundreds of Arab and foreign investors are preparing to return with their money to Lebanon after they were searching for a secure place,” Prime Minister Fuad Saniora said in a statement after chairing his Cabinet’s last meeting Friday night.
Suleiman’s election Sunday is expected to fuel momentum toward stability, and he has pledged to strengthen “reconciliation and understanding” among rival factions.
“Lebanon is a country that deserves much from us. The Lebanese are a people who enjoy life. They have always proved that they are stronger than crises and pitfalls to which they have been subjected and for which they have paid blood, tears and sacrifices,” An-Nahar newspaper quoted Suleiman as saying Saturday.
“We have a big challenge ahead of us,” he said.
He’s the Hizzies choice for President. The Hizzies now have defacto control and a veto over Lebonese affairs.
Making a deal with the enemy is not going to stop civil war. The Sunnis are pretty much done with the Shia in Lebanon.
The Sunnis and their allies recently kicked some major Hizzie ass in recent conflicts.
This new development is the outcome of events in that battle.
Lebanon will now be the scene of a proxy war between Syria, Iran and the IDF…..unless the Sunnis finally get tired of the Shias and deliver their F-you Iran message.
It’ll happen…soon enough…
May 25th, 2008 at 7:20 amIt still pisses me off that muzzies are fighting over the spoils of the destruction of Christian Lebanon.
Liberal Christians allowed immigration by Arabs and refuge for Pali-Arabs and for their generousity lost their homes, businesses and their homeland.
Islam is Cancer.
May 25th, 2008 at 8:06 am