Lebanon’s PSP, Hezbollah, Amal Hold Talks to Prevent Street Clash

A man clad in a mask depicting the Lebanese flag stands next to flaming tires at a makeshift roadblock set up by anti-government demonstrators in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Lebanon's capital Beirut on March 8, 2021. (AFP)
A man clad in a mask depicting the Lebanese flag stands next to flaming tires at a makeshift roadblock set up by anti-government demonstrators in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Lebanon's capital Beirut on March 8, 2021. (AFP)
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Lebanon’s PSP, Hezbollah, Amal Hold Talks to Prevent Street Clash

A man clad in a mask depicting the Lebanese flag stands next to flaming tires at a makeshift roadblock set up by anti-government demonstrators in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Lebanon's capital Beirut on March 8, 2021. (AFP)
A man clad in a mask depicting the Lebanese flag stands next to flaming tires at a makeshift roadblock set up by anti-government demonstrators in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Lebanon's capital Beirut on March 8, 2021. (AFP)

Contacts were kicked off on Monday between rival Lebanese parties to defuse tensions sparked by street protests fueled by anger at corruption that has led to the worst economic crisis in decades.

Minor clashes had erupted between rival parties that have taken part in the protests.

Officials from the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP) held phone calls with Hezbollah and the Amal Movement to underline “support for the people’s demands, while also stressing opposition to the blocking of roads.”

They warned against attempts to “exploit the wave of popular protests to spark strife.”

The PSP said: “Amid the deteriorating economic and living crisis and absence of any efforts by officials to ease the crisis and government formation impasse, the people have nothing left to do but exercise their most basic right to express their rejection of the crisis.”

The party said it supports the protests as long as they do not harm civil peace and stability.

It added that PSP chief Walid Jumblatt has tasked former minister Ghazi al-Aridi to carry out contacts with Hezbollah official Wafiq Safa and Speaker Nabih Berri’s adviser Ahmed Baalbaki and to “stress the need that protests should not be exploited to create any strife.”

A political crisis has left Lebanon without a government since Hassan Diab resigned last August following the cataclysmic Beirut port blast. Saad Hariri has been named to form a new government but his efforts have stumbled at differences with President Michel Aoun.

The protests come against the backdrop of a crash in the local currency, an increase of consumer goods prices and political bickering between rival groups that has delayed the formation of a new government. Lebanon's currency has lost 85% of its value in the past year and a half.

On Monday, Aoun blasted the road closures calling them “organized acts of sabotage that aim to undermine stability.”



Israeli Likud Party Ministers Urge Netanyahu to Annex West Bank

Israeli soldiers in Tubas in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 11, 2024. (AFP)
Israeli soldiers in Tubas in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 11, 2024. (AFP)
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Israeli Likud Party Ministers Urge Netanyahu to Annex West Bank

Israeli soldiers in Tubas in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 11, 2024. (AFP)
Israeli soldiers in Tubas in the north of the occupied West Bank on September 11, 2024. (AFP)

Cabinet ministers in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party called on Wednesday for Israel to annex the Israeli-occupied West Bank before the Knesset recesses at the end of the month.

They issued a petition ahead of Netanyahu's meeting next week with US President Donald Trump, where discussions are expected to center on a potential 60-day Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal with Hamas.

The petition was signed by 15 cabinet ministers and Amir Ohana, speaker of the Knesset, Israel's parliament.

There was no immediate response from the prime minister's office. Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, long a confidant of Netanyahu, did not sign the petition. He has been in Washington since Monday for talks on Iran and Gaza.

"We ministers and members of Knesset call for applying Israeli sovereignty and law immediately on Judea and Samaria," they wrote, using the biblical names for the West Bank captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.

Their petition cited Israel's recent achievements against both Iran and Iran's allies and the opportunity afforded by the strategic partnership with the US and support of Trump.

It said the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel demonstrated that the concept of Jewish settlement blocs alongside the establishment of a Palestinian state poses an existential threat to Israel.

"The task must be completed, the existential threat removed from within, and another massacre in the heart of the country must be prevented," the petition stated.

Most countries regard Jewish settlements in the West Bank, many of which cut off Palestinian communities from one another, as a violation of international law.

With each advance of Israeli settlements and roads, the West Bank becomes more fractured, further undermining prospects for a contiguous land on which Palestinians could build a sovereign state long envisaged in Middle East peacemaking.

Israel's pro-settler politicians have been emboldened by the return to the White House of Trump, who has proposed Palestinians leave Gaza, a suggestion widely condemned across the Middle East and beyond.