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BEIRUT: Sfeir: Poll Result Averted Takeover By Iran, Syria

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  • BEIRUT: Sfeir: Poll Result Averted Takeover By Iran, Syria

    SFEIR: POLL RESULT AVERTED TAKEOVER BY IRAN, SYRIA
    By Therese Sfeir

    Daily Star
    June 12 2009
    Lebanon

    Siniora wants Hariri to be premier

    BEIRUT: Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Butros Sfeir said in comments
    to be published Friday that had the opposition won the June 7
    parliamentary polls, "Syria and Iran would have taken control of
    our country." "They [the opposition] wanted to take over Lebanon,
    but now President Michel Sleiman rules Lebanon," the patriarch told
    Al-Massira magazine.

    Sfeir said that while Syria withdrew its troops from Lebanon,
    "it still has some ambitions in Lebanon."

    Syria ended its 30-year military presence in Lebanon in 2005,
    amid a wave of anti-Syrian demonstrations in Lebanon following the
    assassination of former Premier Rafik Hariri.

    Many blamed the killing on Syria, but Damascus has repeatedly denied
    involvement.

    On Thursday, former US President Jimmy Carter, currently on a visit to
    Damascus, told Syrian President Bashar Assad that Lebanon's elections
    were "a real success."

    Carter said he had wished to hold talks with Hizbullah officials,
    but added that they "refused to meet with us."

    Carter headed an elections monitoring mission during Lebanon's
    elections on Sunday.

    In other news, the European Union's foreign policy chief Javier Solana
    will arrive in Beirut Friday for a two-day visit, during which he will
    meet with President Michel Sleiman, Foreign Minister Fawzi Salloukh,
    Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and Speaker Nabih Berri.

    Sleiman and Siniora held talks at Baabda Palace Thursday. Siniora
    told reporters following the meeting that he nominated Future Movement
    leader MP Saad Hariri to head the new government.

    Solana will also meet with the members of the Loyalty to the Resistance
    parliamentary bloc.

    The chief of European diplomacy will hold a news conference at the
    Rafik Hariri International Airport on Saturday, before leaving the
    capital.

    Hariri said Thursday that he was willing to offer Hizbullah and
    its allies in the opposition "guarantees," in return for forming an
    "efficient government."

    During an interview with the Financial Times, Hariri said: "What is
    needed at this point is for the majority to offer the opposition some
    guarantees on specific issues, and to form a cabinet that is capable
    of fulfilling these guarantees."

    The Future Movement leader also held Israel responsible for hampering
    peace efforts in the Middle East. He described Israel's statements
    about the Lebanese elections as "absurd."

    Hariri also rejected claims that the election of US President Barack
    Obama helped him and his allies in the March 14 Forces to win the
    elections.

    In other developments, the Cabinet will convene on Friday for the first
    time after the elections. The session, which will be held at the Baabda
    Palace, will see the discussion of the 2009 draft budget. Sleiman
    met with Speaker Nabih Berri's political aide, MP Ali Hassan Khalil,
    on Thursday to discuss the issue.

    Meanwhile, Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt condemned
    "attacks launched by some parties against the Armenian community."

    In a statement Thursday, Jumblatt criticized those "who are describing
    the Armenians and the Tashnag party as outsiders."

    The PSP leader noted that the Armenians contributed to building
    the Lebanese state and were one of the pillars in establishing the
    national pact. "A disagreement between the Tashnag party and another
    political party does not make the Armenians outsiders," he added.

    Separately, Siniora stressed Thursday his keenness on preserving the
    unity of the Lebanese and principles of Arabism.

    Addressing visitors in the Sidon town of Majdalyoun, Siniora said:
    "We want to protect the Lebanese people's unity, their Arabism,
    and the unity of Muslims."

    "We also want to preserve coexistence, regardless of the misbehavior
    of some parties," Siniora added.

    Meanwhile, Lebanese Forces (LF) leader Samir Geagea reiterated his
    rejection of the vetoing third in the Cabinet. After a meeting with
    Siniora on Thursday, Geagea said: "Our stance is clearly against the
    veto power in government because it brings nothing new."

    Meanwhile, MP Marwan Hamadeh warned that the majority March 14 alliance
    would not accept the re-election of Berri as Parliament speaker unless
    a number of issues, including the premiership and cabinet formation,
    were settled.

    In remarks published by pan-Arab Ash-Sharq al-Awsat Thursday, Hamadeh
    stressed the need for a "complete basket," rejecting the re-election
    of Berri before settling other issues.

    In a news conference Wednesday, Former Minister Nassib Lahoud said
    the elections "confirmed that the Lebanese people can rely on the
    democratic game as a peaceful means for governance."

    However, Lahoud added that the March 14 Forces would have been able to
    achieve a wider majority if it had avoided major mistakes, especially
    in the districts of Metn and Kesrouan.

    Lahoud called on the March 14 Forces to "rectify their practices and
    mistakes in order to benefit from experiences of the past phase."
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