Lebanese President Seeks to Find Ways to End Cabinet Deadlock

President Michel Aoun on Thursday illuminated the Christmas tree at Baabda Presidential Palace, during a ceremony attended by several figures/NNA
President Michel Aoun on Thursday illuminated the Christmas tree at Baabda Presidential Palace, during a ceremony attended by several figures/NNA
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Lebanese President Seeks to Find Ways to End Cabinet Deadlock

President Michel Aoun on Thursday illuminated the Christmas tree at Baabda Presidential Palace, during a ceremony attended by several figures/NNA
President Michel Aoun on Thursday illuminated the Christmas tree at Baabda Presidential Palace, during a ceremony attended by several figures/NNA

President Michel Aoun is working on a solution to the cabinet crisis, and has informed his visitors that he might send a letter to Parliament for examining constitutional measures that could push all parties to assume responsibility in resolving the stalemate, informed sources in Beirut told Asharq Al-Awsat on Thursday.

“Aoun believes that there should be an exit (to the cabinet crisis) soon, because he believes that the latest developments began to damage his powers and are driving the country towards bigger crises,” the sources said.

A proposal to form a 32 instead of a 30-member cabinet has so far failed to produce a breakthrough.

Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has not yet expressed his stance, although both Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri have backed the idea.

The initiative, which was first made by caretaker Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, stipulates adding two ministers to the proposed 30-member line up - One representing the Christian minorities and the second the Allawite sect.

Commenting on the proposal, caretaker Education Minister Marwan Hamadeh, who is close to Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat, said: “We have not been given the proposal’s details. We are still attached to our position of supporting a national unity government, which includes all parties.”

MP Michel Moussa from Berri’s parliamentary bloc denied reports saying the March 8 alliance was planning to withdraw its nomination for Hariri to form the next government. “No such article in the Lebanese Constitution allows this measure,” he said.



Estimates of Hunger, Disease Claiming 990 Lives in Sudan’s Darfur

Sudanese displaced arrive in El Gedaref city in the east on Sunday, fleeing from Sennar state to the south (AFP)
Sudanese displaced arrive in El Gedaref city in the east on Sunday, fleeing from Sennar state to the south (AFP)
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Estimates of Hunger, Disease Claiming 990 Lives in Sudan’s Darfur

Sudanese displaced arrive in El Gedaref city in the east on Sunday, fleeing from Sennar state to the south (AFP)
Sudanese displaced arrive in El Gedaref city in the east on Sunday, fleeing from Sennar state to the south (AFP)

Over 50,000 people fled by foot from intense fighting between the army and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the Sudanese city of El Fashir, North Darfur. They walked more than 60 kilometers to Tawila town in scorching temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius. Some died from hunger and thirst, as reported by local media.

Displaced individuals in Tawila and other Darfur towns endure dire conditions, with 991 deaths recorded between April 15 and May 15 due to famine and disease outbreaks, according to Adam Rijal, spokesperson for Darfur’s Coordination of Displaced Persons and Refugees.

“The displaced in Tawila are starving, with children crying from hunger,” Rijal told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“The little milk they receive isn’t enough for their small stomachs,” he added, underscoring Tawila’s critical lack of basic essentials.

Eyewitnesses described dire conditions faced by refugees fleeing war on their long journey to Tawila, where scorching temperatures worsened their plight.

Asylum seekers in Tawila affirm that the displacement journeys are unsafe, with vulnerable refugees at risk of being robbed by armed gangs. Those reaching Tawila considered themselves lucky to have avoided such attacks.

Sudanese human rights activist Adam Idris told Asharq Al-Awsat that indiscriminate shelling in El Fashir claimed hundreds of lives, forcing many to flee to Tawila and areas controlled by the Sudan Liberation Movement.

Idris noted that some displaced persons died en route due to hunger and thirst, urging humanitarian organizations to swiftly provide aid in the town.

In a related development, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) reported on Tuesday that over 402,000 Sudanese refugees are now registered in Egypt, with more expected in the coming months.

In a statement, UNHCR noted that over 38,000 Sudanese refugees arrived in Egypt in May alone. Libya and Uganda have recently joined the Regional Refugee Response Plan, along with the Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, and South Sudan.

UNHCR emphasized that only 19% of the needed funds for refugee assistance have been received so far, insufficient to meet the urgent needs of displaced people.

In Libya, more than 20,000 Sudanese refugees have arrived since April, with many settling in the eastern regions.

Uganda, hosting the largest number of refugees in Africa, has received over 39,000 Sudanese refugees since the conflict began, including 27,000 this year. This number is nearly three times higher than anticipated.

After 14 months of conflict, thousands continue to flee Sudan due to violence, violations, death, disrupted services, and limited humanitarian aid access, with the threat of famine looming.