Suleiman: local demands behind cabinet impasse

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Lebanese President Michel Suleiman denied on Sunday that foreign obstacles were behind the delay of the cabinet formation process, saying the impasse was due to local “demands.”

“There are no foreign obstacles ,” Suleiman told reporters in Bkirki after meeting with Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi. The impasse is due to the “demands of Lebanese parliamentary blocs” and “not obstacles,” he said.

He stressed the importance of relying on dialogue and the constitution in solving cabinet formation problems.

Suleiman made his remark before attending Easter mass in Bkirki.

Share in cabinet

“The constitution doesn’t give anyone shares,” Suleiman said in reference to his dispute with Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun over the interior ministry portfolio and the lawmaker’s demand for the lion’s share of the Christian representation in the new government.

Aoun has been attacking president Suleiman ever since PM Designate Nagib Mikati has been trying to form the cabinet .

On February 16 Aoun said he won’t let the president have any portfolio.

” The issue of the president’s share (in cabinet) is a farce that is not subject to any constitutional provisions or the criteria of popular support, and personally I won’t give Suleiman any portfolio as he hasn’t been a consensual president.”

On March 1 Aoun said with reference to president Suleiman’s share in the cabinet :

“Nothing in the constitution determines the shares of the country’s president in the cabinet. The president abides by the law but he does not rule. Granting the president specific cabinet shares is a violation of the constitution.”

Lebanon has been run by a caretaker government since last January. Mikati was appointed in January as the PM designate with the backing of the Hezbollah led-March 8 alliance, MPs Walid Jumblatt and Mohammad Safadi . March 14 leaders have repeatedly said that intimidation from Hezbollah’s weapons helped secure the parliamentary majority for Mikati’s nomination

Mikati has not yet been able to form a cabinet . Aoun’s demand that he should receive a blocking third of cabinet seats, including the Interior Ministry , currently part of President Suleiman’s cabinet share has reportedly been the main reason behind the delay in cabinet formation.

Syria

Asked about the protests against the regime in Syria, the president said that he was in continued contact with his Syrian counterpart, Bashar Assad, and stressed that Lebanon backs the neighboring country’s stability and supports reforms announced by the Syrian leadership.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has been facing the biggest challenge to his rule. Popular protests demanding greater freedoms and an end to corruption erupted over a month ago in southern Syria and spread to the capital Damascus and most cities in Syria.

Just like the Egyptian, Tunisian and Libyan regimes the Syrian regime has been blaming foreigners for the protests. Last week the Syrian regime accused a Lebanese Future movement legislator of funding and arming the opposition to fuel a wave of protests in the country, a charge that was repeatedly denied by the party and MP Jamal al Jarrah.

Bkirki meeting

About the meeting held between the rival Maronite leaders in Bkirki last Tuesday, Suleiman said the talks were the result of the “partnership and love” slogan announced by Patriarch Rai after his election.

He stressed on the importance of following up on the talks and said: “Political rhetoric should enjoy a high level of responsibility.”

Easter greetings

On Saturday, Suleiman extended his greetings to the Lebanese hoping for the “real resurrection of Lebanon.”

He said in a statement released by his press office that he hoped for the “real resurrection of Lebanon the state that protects all its citizens and unifies them under the slogan of love, justice and law.”

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