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  • Karami unveils final Cabinet lineup

    Karami unveils final Cabinet lineup
    30-member government includes 2 women

    By Nada Raad and Nafez Kawas
    Daily Star staff
    Wednesday, October 27, 2004

    BEIRUT: Prime Minister-designate Omar Karami formed a pro-Syrian
    30-minister Cabinet on Tuesday excluding opposition members and former
    Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's parliamentary bloc, but, for the first
    time in Lebanon, naming two women to ministerial posts.

    "We would have wished all parties to participate, but we could not
    do better," Karami, who had called for a national unity government
    to face the pressures on Lebanon, said from Baabda following the
    announcement of his new Cabinet.

    The Cabinet reshuffle comes amid international pressures on Syria to
    withdraw its troops from Lebanon.

    However, Karami promised that his Cabinet will draft a new
    parliamentary electoral law respecting the Taif Accord, which
    stipulates that Syria leave Lebanon.

    The Cabinet excludes anti-Syrian opposition groups, who boycotted the
    parliamentary consultations ahead of Karami's appointment. However,
    the prime minister designate said that it was the opposition that
    decided not to participate in his Cabinet, despite attempts he
    initiated in the last few days.

    "We will continue to deal with the opposition to solve all difficulties
    placed on Lebanon," he said.

    Karami's Cabinet is the first to include two women, Leila Solh,
    daughter of former Prime Minister Riad Solh and aunt of billionaire
    Saudi Prince Walid Bin Talal, and Wafaa Hamza, a Shiite close to
    Speaker Nabih Berri. Said Karami, "Women constitute half the Lebanese
    population."

    Two of the most prominent portfolios, the defense and foreign
    ministries, were given to Syria's allies Abdel-Hamid Mrad and Mahmoud
    Hammoud, while Syria's strongest ally, Suleiman Franjieh, was named
    interior minister.

    Karami named economist and former Minister Elias Saba as finance
    minister, at a time when his government is suffering from an estimated
    $35 billion national debt.

    Druze Talal Arslan was named minister of the displaced, replacing his
    opponent Chouf MP Walid Jumblatt, who said he will not participate
    in any Cabinet under Lahoud's mandate in opposition to the extension
    of the president's term for three years on Sept. 3.

    In accordance with the Taif Accord, the Cabinet must include equal
    Christian and Muslim representation spread between six Christian
    Maronites, four Christian Orthodox, three Christian Catholics,
    two Christian Armenians, six Shiites, six Sunnis and three Druze,
    headed by a Sunni Muslim prime minister.

    The Cabinet was announced following extensive and lengthy consultations
    between Lahoud, Berri and Karami over the past five days.

    Kararmi's first visit to Baabda on Tuesday was used to reach an
    agreement over the names appointed to some ministries.

    Sources close to the Cabinet discussions said that Berri vetoed the
    presence of former Speaker Hussein Husseini in the Cabinet and demanded
    that the names of all six Shiites ministers receive his approval.

    Berri, who heads the Amal Movement, issued a statement on Tuesday
    denying all information about a "Shiite obstacle" in the Cabinet
    reshuffle.

    "There is no Shiite obstacle at all in the Cabinet reshuffle. Several
    of the names mentioned in the press are inaccurate," the statement
    said.

    After resolving the interior ministry obstacle, granted to outgoing
    Health Minister Suleiman Franjieh after outgoing Interior Minister
    Elias Murr announced he would not participate in the next Cabinet,
    other difficulties emerged over the past 24 hours concerning the
    names to be appointed in the culture and education ministries.

    Sources said that while Lahoud wanted to grant the Education Ministry
    to Bsharri MP Qabalan Issa Khoury's nephew Ibrahim Daher, Karami
    wanted the post for Sami Minkara or Tammam Salam.

    "Salam wanted the Public Works and Transportation or the Education
    Ministry, but we could not offer him either of the two portfolios. We
    hope to include him in future cabinets," Karami said.

    Sources said that former Beirut MP Tammam Salam also wanted a prominent
    ministry as none of Beirut's main figures were handed a portfolio.

    Hariri's parliamentary bloc, which includes 17 Beirut MPs, announced
    last week it would not participate in the next cabinet. It also
    refrained last Thursday from naming a prime minister during the
    compulsory parliamentary consultations with Lahoud.

    Early before heading to Baabda, Karami said from his residence in
    Ramlet al-Baida that the delay in the Cabinet reshuffle was due to
    obstacles concerning names more than allotted portfolios.

    Karami also received a delegation from the Syrian Social Nationalist
    Party headed by the party's president Gebran Araiji and a delegation
    from the Phalange Party, two visits which were kept away from the
    media.

    The new Cabinet excludes members of the opposition, such as Jumblatt's
    Democratic Gathering parliamentary bloc, the Qornet Shehwan Gathering
    and any ally of Hariri.

    Karami's extensive attempts to include members of the opposition in
    his Cabinet failed late Monday. The opposition groups, although not
    opposing Karami personally, are determined not to participate in a
    cabinet that falls short concerning basic national objectives, such
    as implementing the Taif Accord.

    They have also repeatedly said that the next cabinet will not bring
    any improvement to the current situation.

    "We refused to participate in the next cabinet knowing ... that the
    opposition would be a minority and could not make any difference
    to face the majority of pro-regime parties and forces that are
    determined to keep the situation going as it is now," said Qornet
    Shehwan Gathering member Batroun MP Butros Harb in a statement Tuesday.

    Until late Monday night, Karami was still trying to convince both
    Harb and Zghorta MP Nayla Mouawad to join his Cabinet. However,
    his initiatives failed when the opposition groups said they would
    not participate in a cabinet that lacks reform plans.

    What remains to be seen following the Cabinet reshuffle is whether
    it will be granted the confidence of Parliament, which requires the
    vote of 86 out of its 128 MPs.

    According to Article 64 of the Constitution, "The Cabinet does not
    exercise its powers before it gains Parliament's confidence."

    The 29 MPs who voted against the constitutional amendment of the
    extension of Lahoud's term may refuse to cast their vote for the
    new Cabinet. However, such a number would not affect the Cabinet's
    legitimacy. But if Hariri's parliamentary bloc decided not to vote
    in favor of the government, in addition to the 29 other MPs, Karami's
    Cabinet would not be able to exercise its powers.

    On Wednesday morning the   ministers will go to the Cabinet offices
    in Beirut, form a committee and issue a ministerial statement that
    needs to receive Parliament's vote of confidence before the ministers
    start exercising their powers.



    Lineup of new cabinet


    Prime Minister: Omar Karami Deputy Premier: Issam Fares

    Finance Minister: Elias Saba

    Information Minister: Elie Ferzli

    Minister of State: Albert Mansour 

    Interior Minister: Suleiman Franjieh

    Minister of the Displaced: Talal Arslan

    Education Minister: Sami Minkara

    Defense Minister: Abdel-Rahim Mrad

    Public Works and Transport Minister: Yassin Jaber

    Social Affairs Minister: Ghazi Zeaiter

    State Minister: Karam Karam

    Sports and Youth Minister: Sebouh Hovnanian

    Foreign Minister: Mahmoud Hammoud

    Telecommunications Minister: Jean-Louis Qordahi

    Agriculture Minister: Elias Skaff

    Labor Minister: Assem Qanso

    Tourism Minister: Farid Khazen

    Economy Minister: Adnan Qassar

    Minister of State: Mahmoud Abdel-Khaleq

    Justice Minister: Adnan Addoum

    Culture Minister: Naji Boustany

    Energy Minister: Maurice Sehnawi

    Industry Minister: Leila Solh

    Minister of State for Administrative Development: Ibrahim Daher

    Minister of State: Youssef Salameh

    Health Minister: Mohammed Jawad Khalifeh

    Minister of State: Wafaa Hamzeh

    Minister of State: Alain Tabourian

    Environment Minister: Wi'am Wahab

    --Boundary_(ID_cawbwTzA3G86VFijMUcZ2g)--
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