Lebanon: Franjieh Accuses Aoun, Bassil of Lying

Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun launches the oil exploration vessel in Block No. 4, north of Beirut, Lebanon on February 27, 2020. Photo by Dalati Nohra/Handout via Reuters
Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun launches the oil exploration vessel in Block No. 4, north of Beirut, Lebanon on February 27, 2020. Photo by Dalati Nohra/Handout via Reuters
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Lebanon: Franjieh Accuses Aoun, Bassil of Lying

Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun launches the oil exploration vessel in Block No. 4, north of Beirut, Lebanon on February 27, 2020. Photo by Dalati Nohra/Handout via Reuters
Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun launches the oil exploration vessel in Block No. 4, north of Beirut, Lebanon on February 27, 2020. Photo by Dalati Nohra/Handout via Reuters

The leader of Al-Marada party, former Minister and MP Sleiman Franjieh lashed out at President Michel Aoun and the head of the FPM, MP Gebran Bassil, accusing them of lying and politicizing the defective fuel scandal.

In a press conference on Monday, Franjieh said that recent investigations over the defected fuel file - which included the head of the Energy Ministry’s oil facilities department Sarkis Hleis – were politicized.

“Sarkis Hleis will appear before the judiciary, but not before the justice and the judges of Gebran Bassil,” he said.

Stressing that the official was innocent, he said: “The judiciary will decide whether Sarkis Hleis is guilty or not and we consider the counterfeit fuel file politicized because the side and judges who raised it are known,” Franjieh added.

On a different note, the Marada leader asserted that there were no offshore oil or gas reserves in Lebanon, revealing that French giant Total “is studying the option to pay the penalty clause and leave Lebanon.”

“Lebanon is not an oil country and has no trace of gas in it. They have lied to you,” he underlined.

Turning to Aoun, Franjieh launched the fiercest attack at the president since his election in 2016.

“You have lied to people in 1989 and you destroyed Lebanon and the Christian regions. You lied to people in 2005 and now you are lying to people. Your strength came from popular support and today your strength stems from being in power. But when power wanes, you will become nothing. If the judiciary won’t put you on trial, history will,” he said.

The presidential office issued a statement saying that most of Franjieh’s remarks were baseless, false, and “not worthy of a response.”

The statement added that “insults” thrown by the Marada chief “harm Lebanon’s reputation, interest, economy, role, and presence in its neighborhood and the world, especially what he mentioned about the issue of oil and gas exploration.”



New Year Hope and Joy Reign in a Damascus Freed from Assad

A young woman holds the Flag of Syria as people celebrate the New Year near Umayyad Square in Damascus, Syria, on January 1, 2025. (AFP)
A young woman holds the Flag of Syria as people celebrate the New Year near Umayyad Square in Damascus, Syria, on January 1, 2025. (AFP)
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New Year Hope and Joy Reign in a Damascus Freed from Assad

A young woman holds the Flag of Syria as people celebrate the New Year near Umayyad Square in Damascus, Syria, on January 1, 2025. (AFP)
A young woman holds the Flag of Syria as people celebrate the New Year near Umayyad Square in Damascus, Syria, on January 1, 2025. (AFP)

Umayyad Square in Damascus hummed to the throngs of people brandishing "revolution" flags as Syria saw in the new year with hope following 13 years of civil war.

Gunshots rang out from Mount Qasioun overlooking the capital where hundreds of people gazed up at fireworks, an AFP reporter at the square saw.

It was the first new year's celebration without an Assad in power for more than 50 years after the fall of Bashar al-Assad in December.

"Long live Syria, Assad has fallen," shouted some children.

"We did not expect such a miracle to happen, today the Syrians have found their smile again," Layane el Hijazi, a 22-year-old agricultural engineering student, told AFP from Umayyad Square.

"We were able to obtain our rights, we can now talk. I am letting off steam these last three weeks and tonight by bringing out everything I had buried," she said.

Despite the revelry, soldiers patrolled the streets of Damascus less than a month after Assad's rapid demise.

The green, white and black revolution flag with its three red stars flies all over the capital.

Such a sight -- the symbol of the Syrian people's uprising against the Assad dynasty's iron-fisted rule -- was unthinkable a month ago.

The fall of Assad brought an end to more than half a century of unchallenged rule by his family's clan over Syria, where dissent was repressed and public freedoms were heavily curtailed.

"Whatever happens, it will be better than before," said Imane Zeidane, 46, a cartoonist, who came to Umayyad Square with her husband and their daughter.

"I am starting the new year with serenity and optimism," she said, adding that she has "confidence" in the new government under de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa.

She also remembers that new year's celebrations in previous years were "not like this".

"The joy is double now -- you come down to celebrate the new year with your heart, and celebrate the hope it carries," Zeidane said.

- 'Fears have dissipated' -

The revolutionary song "Lift your head, you are a free Syrian" by Syrian singer Assala Nasri rang out loud on Umayyad Square.

"Every year, we aged suddenly by 10 years," taxi driver Qassem al-Qassem, 34, told AFP in reference to the tough living conditions in a country whose economy collapsed under Assad.

"But with the fall of regime, all our fears have dissipated," he said.

"Now I have a lot of hope. But all we want now is peace."

More than half a million people died in the 13-year civil war as the country split into different regions controlled by various warring parties.

Many families are still waiting for news of loved ones who went missing under Assad's rule, during which time tens of thousands of prisoners disappeared.

"I hope that Syria in 2025 will be non-denominational, pluralist, for everyone, without exception," said Havan Mohammad, a Kurdish student from the northeast studying pharmacy in the capital.