Lebanon’s Christians must agree on president: Jumblatt

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jumblatt 100jumbBeirut, Lebanon – With minorities facing death and persecution at the hands of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, Lebanon’s Christians must lay aside their rivalries and agree on who should fill the vacant presidency, a leading Druze politician has warned.

Walid Jumblatt, the most influential figure in Lebanon’s Druze community, says he is as alarmed as anyone by the rise of the radical Islamist group guided by a puritanical vision of Islam that is a major threat to religious minorities including his own. Christians and Yazidis have fled its advance in Iraq.

Jumblatt said Christian leaders in Lebanon, itself the target of a deadly incursion by Islamic State fighters from Syria this month, needed to recognise the danger of what is going on in the region and agree on a new head of state.

Lebanon’s presidency, the only one reserved for a Christian in the Arab world, has been vacant since May, when Michel Suleiman’s term ended. Parliament has repeatedly failed to elect his successor in the absence of a political agreement.

Many observers believe that such an accord must be brokered by rival regional states that wield critical influence over Lebanon’s competing alliances, particularly Saudi Arabia and Iran. But Jumblatt said the problem was “local”.

“It’s a Christian mistake. They are not seeing what is (going on) in the surroundings,” he said. “It’s up to them to know that by keeping this division they are making the Christian presence in Lebanon weaker and weaker.”

“They are weakening themselves and weakening Lebanon.”

Once the dominant force in Lebanon, the Maronites today stand divided between rival alliances that define the country’s crises-ridden politics: the March 8 coalition including the Iranian-backed Shi’ite group Hezbollah, and the Saudi-backed March 14 alliance led by Sunni politician Saad al-Hariri.

With Maronite leaders including civil war foes Michel Aoun and Samir Geagea both eyeing the presidency, it will only likely be filled by a deal on a candidate acceptable to all.

Army chief Jean Kahwaji, whose forces battled the Islamist militants for five days in the border town of Arsal this month, is seen as one potential candidate. Both Suleiman and his predecessor, Emile Lahoud, were former army commanders.

“BLAMING HEZBOLLAH WILL LEAD NOWHERE”

Besides the presidency, parliamentary elections have also fallen victim to political deadlock. Elections that were due to take place last year were postponed until later this year.

Jumblatt linked his support for another extension of the existing parliament’s term to the election of a president: “I will just go for a technical prolongation of some months, maybe six months, conditioned on the election of a president.”

The Druze are one of Lebanon’s smaller sects but punch above their weight in politics. Jumblatt has maximised his influence by switching allegiances several times in recent years.

Despite their differences, Lebanese leaders have managed to unite in the face of the threat posed by the Islamic State.

Together with other radical groups, its fighters seized the border town of Arsal on Aug. 2, in the most serious spillover to date of Syria’s three-year-long civil war into Lebanon.

Dozens of people, including 19 soldiers, were killed in the ensuing battle. The militants withdrew on Aug. 5, taking with them 19 captured soldiers and 17 policemen.

“The Islamic State is a threat to both the moderate Islam headed by Mr. Saad al-Hariri and of course for Hezbollah,” said Jumblatt. “There is a convergence, an anxiety of a common enemy … which is good,” he said.

Praising the army, he added: “Beyond our stupid political disputes, we still have institutions that can resist.”

The Arsal crisis brought Hariri back to Lebanon after three years of self-imposed exile. He brought with him $1 billion in Saudi aid to help the security forces fight extremism.

Jumblatt said Hariri must “remind people that the Muslims of Lebanon cannot go into radicalism”. A religious minority spread across the region, the Druze, a faith rooted in Islam but influenced by ancient Greek and Indian philosophy, have survived previous waves of persecution throughout history.

The rise of the Islamic State appears to have pushed Jumblatt closer to Hezbollah, whose highly trained guerrillas are fighting the Sunni Islamist-dominated insurgency in Syria alongside President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.

While maintaining his fierce opposition to Assad, Jumblatt has eased off in his criticism of Hezbollah’s role in Syria.

Hezbollah’s political foes, including Hariri, still say its role in Syria has provoked Sunni Islamist attacks in Lebanon.

Jumblatt stuck by his forecast that Assad would eventually fall. “He will not survive. Ultimately he will fall,” he said.

But he said there was no point in blaming Hezbollah for fighting in Syria, saying that the group was implementing Iranian policy. “Continuing to blame Hezbollah will lead to nowhere,” he said. “Now we have to somewhere find a kind of coordination – a political effort, a political joint venture.”

“It’s up to us now.”

Reuters

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24 responses to “Lebanon’s Christians must agree on president: Jumblatt”

  1. MekensehParty Avatar
    MekensehParty

    “Walid Jumblatt, the most influential figure in Lebanon’s Druze community”
    Is he? Then it’s a community of coward liars!!!!

    1. 5thDrawer Avatar
      5thDrawer

      He has a point. The ‘Christian Mindset’ is resulting in the divisions, since it allows for a variance of thought on how society should be working for it’s people, and the better ways to accomplish it. While the ‘One Book of Rules’ people are basically divided into only two parts – with a few radicals off to the side – the Christians look at many possibilities and see good or bad in what minor politicians come up with for their ‘locals’. ;-))
      The electric problems highlight the differences.
      The Christians will argue between themselves over what is considered fair pricing vs service.
      The ‘other guys’ only do one of two things. Pay … or Not.

      1. MekensehParty Avatar
        MekensehParty

        I didn’t read the article, I don’t read what Jumblat says, in fact I don’t understand how any journalist with any respect for the profession keeps reporting what a proven liar says.
        As for the self-proclaimed “Christians” (from Rai down to the newly baptized infant) they can all stay in the hell they created for themselves.

        1. 5thDrawer Avatar
          5thDrawer

          Yup … but I think most of those (aside from a certain pack in Australia) just decided to get out. Moving on, as it were. No-one listens to them anyway.

          1. MekensehParty Avatar
            MekensehParty

            and so they spend their time lingering on Lebanese blogs
            so romantic… (in its authentic meaning not happy valentine romantic)

          2. 5thDrawer Avatar
            5thDrawer

            A friend sent me a pic of the ‘Super-Moon’ over Mina … sigh … the walk along the beach-front would have been lovely … waves lapping … cappuccino in one hand … lady in the other … couldn’t see it here due to clouds.
            In here, there is so much imagination …
            But yes, the romance dies when you think a male and female holding hands would also be dodging bullets for doing that … the cappuccino spilling, if not the blood. The moon, however, would be the martyr … Super. 😉

          3. MekensehParty Avatar
            MekensehParty

            now that’s poetry…

  2. sweetvirgo Avatar
    sweetvirgo

    “It’s a Christian mistake. They are not seeing what is (going on) in the surroundings,” he said. “It’s up to them to know that by keeping this division they are making the Christian presence in Lebanon weaker and weaker.”

    “They are weakening themselves and weakening Lebanon.”

    Take a freakin seat you dumb @ss. Who keeps walking out of those “meetings” to elect a candidate? Who’s blocking??

    1. 5thDrawer Avatar
      5thDrawer

      Yes, he should be ‘on board’ with the March 14 crowd. It’s the larger one.
      Only the stupid ‘rules’ of %age-in-attendance to vote keeps anything from happening.

      1. MekensehParty Avatar
        MekensehParty

        They don’t threaten to kill him and all his family…

        1. 5thDrawer Avatar
          5thDrawer

          Well … Can’t say that about the pot-shots taken at Geagea … hehehe
          And Hariri just doesn’t stick around to give them a target. :-)))

          1. MekensehParty Avatar
            MekensehParty

            He came, gave them a billion dollar finger, looked like Arsal, Lebanon and its army’s savior and ran before they can track his ass.
            it was pretty funny actually.

          2. 5thDrawer Avatar
            5thDrawer

            Don’t forget … they all had a dinner and celebration …

          3. MekensehParty Avatar
            MekensehParty

            nothing beats a tabouli baladiyi 😉

      2. sweetvirgo Avatar
        sweetvirgo

        He flip flops all the time. He is worse than a woman LOL

    2. MekensehParty Avatar
      MekensehParty

      This guy is the archetype of all that is wrong in Lebanon
      In him one can see all the flaws and stains of the Lebanese people.
      I remember how that dog assassinated the Cedar revolution on its greatest day
      how the cockroaches of the resistance started looking for a hole to hide when they saw the Lebanese people united against their terrorism and how Jumblat gave them a lifeline…
      But as the adage says: “Every dog has a day”

      1. sweetvirgo Avatar
        sweetvirgo

        I swear I can’t stand this guy. Every time I see his face I just want to scream.

  3. The real lebanese Avatar
    The real lebanese

    He just wants his candidate to win. The only group weakening Lebanon is the group that doesnt vote. This isnt a democracy anymore, this is almost a monarchy. If Hezbollah doesnt like it, its not happening. Hezbollah knows any president with out strong ties to them will push for securing the border with Syria with UNIFIL. There all of Hezbollah’s movements will be recorded.

  4. Maborlz Ez-Hari Avatar
    Maborlz Ez-Hari

    I like wally, he adds humour to my day just look at his head very Einsteinish.

    1. 5thDrawer Avatar
      5thDrawer

      Ask Hind .. she would recognize it. 😉

      1. Maborlz Ez-Hari Avatar
        Maborlz Ez-Hari

        There was a farmer who had a dog and wally was his name, w.a.l.l.y,
        W.a.l.l.y, w.a.l.l.y and wally was his name.

  5. 5thDrawer Avatar
    5thDrawer

    One would really have to say, that like the other ‘parties’, the Christians are only represented in the Cabinet by the idiots that were ‘elected’ to it … some year way back when. I doubt there’s a huge poll of all Christians asking them their opinions on the one matter. And if any of their ‘reps’ or Jumby had that in hand, he might be able to make such a blanket statement.
    Most of Lebanon’s problems are from listening to Cabinet-member statements about how they are supposed to be thinking.

  6. Maborlz Ez-Hari Avatar
    Maborlz Ez-Hari

    He looks like he cant be bothered living.

  7. Fauzia45 Avatar

    It might help if you stop^ switching ^and swaying and swinging!!!!

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