Lebanon's PM to return home for Independence Day celebrations
Lebanon's PM to return home for
Independence Day celebrations
Half a month after surprisingly announcing resignation in Saudi Arabia, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said here Saturday that he would return to Lebanon for Independence Day celebrations on Nov. 22 and "make known his position on all subjects".
Half a month after surprisingly announcing resignation in Saudi Arabia, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri said here Saturday that he would return to Lebanon for Independence Day celebrations on Nov. 22 and "make known his position on all subjects".
He made the
remarks after a meeting and a lunch with French President Emmanuel Macron at
Elysee Palace. Hariri arrived in Paris with his wife Lara Saturday morning from
the Saudi Arabian capital Riyadh.
"I will go
to Beirut in the coming days. I will participate in the celebration of our
independence, and I will make known my position on all subjects after having
met (Lebanese) president Michel Aoun," Hariri was quoted as saying by the French TV channel
BFMTV.
"Hariri
called Aoun to confirm that he would return to the country by Nov. 22, shortly
after the PM arrived in Paris from Riyadh," said a statement issued by Lebanon's presidential
media office.
According to a
statement released later by parliament speaker Nabih Berri, Hariri called the
speaker and said he would attend Wednesday's celebrations, along with Aoun and
Berri.
The Lebanese
prime minister announced his resignation early this month in a televised speech
aired from Riyadh and his visit there had prolonged to more than 10 days
despite repeated calls from Beirut for his return, leading to speculations
about his freedom of travel, including President Aoun's accusation that Saudi
Arabia was "detaining" Hariri.
Hariri said
Friday on his Twitter account that "his stay in Riyadh was for
consultations on Lebanon's future and its relations with Arab countries. He
dismissed on the same day as "rumors" the reports that he had been
held against his will in Saudi Arabia.
Hariri had
blamed Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah group and Iran for his resignation,
saying he got information about an assassination plot against him. His father,
late Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, was killed in a truck bombing in Beirut in
2005 and the case is still under investigation.
Iran and Saudi
Arabia, two major rivals in the Middle East region, have been trading barbs
following Hariri's sudden resignation and Saudi Arabia's interception of a
ballistic missile fired at a Riyadh airport by the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels
in Yemen, both on Nov. 4. France is seeking to mediate in a political impasse
as a result of Hariri's resignation.
Macron invited
Hariri and his family to France after speaking with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman and the Lebanese prime minister, his office said in a statement on
Wednesday. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had warned that
the Saudi Arabia-Lebanon crisis could lead to "devastating
consequences" for the Middle East.
"What we
want is for peace to be preserved in Lebanon. It is essential that no new
conflict erupts in the region," he noted.
Guterres said he
had been in "very intense contacts" at political and diplomatic
levels with Saudi Arabia and Lebanon, and also with several other regional
countries or countries "with an influence in the region."
The
International Support Group (ISG) for Lebanon, whose members include Britain,
China, France, Germany, Italy, Russia and the United States, said in a joint
statement on Nov. 10 that the ISG had met with President Aoun, and expressed
the welcome to "the call of the president for prime minister Hariri to
return to Lebanon."
A devastating
civil war wrecked Lebanon in 1975-1990, leaving lasting political impacts and a
split of the nation among factions.
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