Lebanon's president sees no reason to delay polls after Hariri exit
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[January 29, 2022]
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanese
President Michel Aoun said on Saturday he saw no reason for a delay to
parliamentary elections in May after three-times former prime minister
Saad al-Hariri announced he was boycotting the vote and stepping away
from politics.
Hariri has been Lebanon's leading Sunni Muslim politician since
inheriting the mantle of his father, Rafik al-Hariri, after his
assassination in 2005.
The move opens a new phase in Lebanon's sectarian politics and adds to
the uncertainties facing a country suffering a financial meltdown that
marks the biggest threat to stability since a 1975-90 civil war.
Aoun, the Maronite Christian president, was speaking after meeting Grand
Mufti Sheikh Abdul Latif Derian, Lebanon's senior Sunni cleric.
"I emphasized to His Eminence the Mufti the role played by the
honourable Sunni community in preserving Lebanon's unity and political
diversity, and the importance of participation with all components of
Lebanon in national and political life," Aoun said.
"We are carrying out all the necessary preparations for holding the
elections on time, and I do not see any reason for delaying them."
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Lebanon's President Michel Aoun meets with Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul
Latif Derian, Lebanon's senior Sunni cleric, in Beirut, Lebanon
January 29, 2022. Dalati Nohra/Handout via REUTERS
Western states want the vote to go
ahead on time.
Together with its allies, the Iran-backed Shi'ite Muslim group
Hezbollah, which is designated a terrorist group by the United
States, won a parliamentary majority in 2018.
A boycott by Hariri and his Future Movement will affect the 20 seats
they won in 2018, and many more won by other groups in local
alliances with Future.
On Friday, Saad's older brother, Bahaa, signalled he was entering
politics, saying he would "continue the journey" of his father.
He plans to support candidates but will not be running himself, his
media advisor said.
Bahaa has been fiercely critical of Hezbollah, and the compromising
approach adopted by Saad towards the group in the later years of his
career.
(Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Mike Harrison)
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