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Qatari Emir Steps Up As Talks Make Halting Progress

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  • Qatari Emir Steps Up As Talks Make Halting Progress

    QATARI EMIR STEPS UP AS TALKS MAKE HALTING PROGRESS
    By Hussein Abdallah

    The Daily Star
    May 19 2008
    Lebanon

    BEIRUT: Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani weighed in on
    the third day of talks his country his hosting among opposition and
    pro-government leaders from Lebanon, meeting separately and jointly
    with members of both camps to try to bridge differences, mainly on
    the issue of drafting a new electoral law for the 2009 parliamentary
    elections.

    Well-informed sources in Doha told The Daily Star on Sunday that
    Sheikh Hamad has intervened and held talks with the rival leaders in
    a bid to address every hurdle in the talks.

    The sources said that Qatari officials are satisfied with the rival
    leaders' positive attitude toward the process. As The Daily Star went
    to press, there were indications that an interim declaration might
    be issued.

    The sources added that the two days of talks have thus far focused
    on an electoral law, adding that the shape of the new government has
    yet to be discussed in detail.

    Despite reports that talks may yet stumble over a demand from the
    ruling coalition for clear guarantees that Hizbullah would not turn
    its guns on them again and that the fate of its arms would be debated
    in Lebanon soon, the sources said that the issue of Hizbullah's arms
    has not been put on the negotiations table in Doha yet.

    Arab mediators clinched a deal on Thursday to end Lebanon's worst
    internal fighting since the 1975-1990 civil war, in which fighters
    from Hizbullah and its allies, the Amal Movement and the Syrian Social
    Nationalist Party, routed pro-government gunmen and briefly seized
    parts of Beirut.

    The fate of Hizbullah's weapons is not on the agenda, but delegates
    said Arab mediators were consulting on the issue with regional
    powerbrokers including Iran, which supports the opposition, and Saudi
    Arabia, which a leading supporter of the ruling coalition.

    "This issue is not under discussion and is not up for discussion on
    the table of dialogue in Doha," Hizbullah MP Hussein Hajj Hassan
    said. "They are trying to raise this issue for their own private
    calculations which are mistaken anyway."

    Hizbullah's chief negotiator, Mohammed Raad, on Sunday accused the
    government of trying to "blackmail" the opposition by raising the
    subject of Hizbullah's weapons.

    Youth and Sports Minister Ahmad Fatfat said that there would be no
    agreement unless the arms issue is addressed.

    "The agreement we reached in Beirut includes discussing this issue
    and the last clause of the six-point agreement says that all the
    points are equally binding," he said.

    But Amal Movement MP Ali Hassan Khalil denied that the six-point
    agreement reached in Beirut had any mention of Hizbullah's possession
    of arms.

    "The agreement speaks about enhancing the authority of the Lebanese
    state, and specifies that this issue is not on the agenda of talks
    and is to be dealt with later on after electing a new president,"
    Khalil said.

    Notwithstanding the sensitive issue of Hizbullah's weapons, the talks
    appeared to make headway on Sunday.

    A six-member committee created on Saturday to lay the framework for
    a new election law has made progress and was now working out the
    details of how to divide Beirut.

    Tashnak Party MP Hagop Pakradounian told LBC television that there
    were major dif-ferences on how to divide Beirut, particularly regarding
    the Christian constituency.

    Reports from Doha said that the ruling majority has proposed dividing
    Beirut into three constituencies - two Sunni-dominated and one
    Christian - with the Christian constituency getting to elect only
    four of Beirut's 10 Christian MPs.

    The capital's Christian seats are currently distributed as follows;
    four seats for Armenians, two for minority Christians, two for Greek
    Orthodox Christians, one for Catholics, and one for Maronites.

    Such a proposal was strongly opposed by the opposition amid reports
    that the Armenian Tashnak Party, allied with the opposition, protested
    leaving the four Armenian seats out of the Christian constituency.

    Pakradounian also indicated that some parties from the parliamentary
    majority were also against the proposal.

    But former President Amin Gemayel sounded more optimistic when speaking
    on the electoral law.

    "I think we have resolved 90 percent of the hurdles facing the new
    election law ... We have some obstacles left regarding some electoral
    constituencies," Gemayel said.

    "Hopefully, by evening we will have published a joint vision. We have
    to reach a solution in the end," he added.

    Earlier on Sunday, Hajj Hassan accused the parliamentary majority of
    doing the math before proposing its formula of a new electoral law.

    "They want to know the results of the elections in advance," he
    told LBC.

    Meanwhile, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabr
    al-Thani had yet to win final approval on the shape of a new government
    but had made several proposals, including one to split seats three
    ways equally among rivals, delegates said.

    Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa told Radio Free Lebanon
    on Sunday that he expected "today to be a decisive day" at the Qatar
    talks that seek to end the 18-month political stalemate and facilitate
    the election of a president after a six-month vacuum.

    Moussa also said that he would visit Damascus after the Doha conference
    concludes its discussions of the crisis.

    The Hizbullah-led opposition wants more say in a cabinet controlled
    by the anti-Syrian March 14 Forces.

    The ruling coalition's refusal to yield to the demand for an effective
    veto power in the cabinet triggered the resignation of six ministers -
    including all five Shiites - in November 2006, crippling a political
    system built around a delicate sectarian balance.

    Election laws have always been a sensitive subject in Lebanon,
    a patchwork of religious sects where redrawing constituencies can
    have a dramatic impact on voting results.

    A deal would lead to the election of commander of Lebanese Armed
    Forces General Michel Suleiman as president.

    Both sides have accepted his nomination for a post reserved for a
    Maronite Christian in Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system. -
    With agencies

    Bush reiterates call for other countries to side against Hizbullah

    SHARM EL-SHEIKH: US President George W. Bush called on Sunday on
    Lebanon's neighbours and other nations in the Middle East to oppose
    Hizbullah.

    "We must stand with the people of Lebanon in their struggle to
    build a sovereign and independent democracy. This means opposing
    Hizbullah terrorists, funded by Iran, who recently revealed their
    true intentions by taking up arms against the Lebanese people,"
    Bush told a forum in Egypt.

    He was speaking as rival Lebanese leaders were meeting in Qatar in a
    bid to resolve a protracted political crisis that recently threatened
    to escalate into all-out civil war.

    At least 65 people were killed in six days of street battles between
    pro- and anti-government forces that saw opposition gunmen led by
    Hizbullah briefly seize control of large swathes of western Beirut.

    "Hizbullah militias are the enemy of a free Lebanon and all nations,
    especially neighbors in the region, have an interest in helping the
    Lebanese people prevail," Bush added.
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