Le Drian: Failure to Form Lebanese Government is 'Terrible Incident'

French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian speaks during a press conference in Paris, France March 11, 2021. Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo
French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian speaks during a press conference in Paris, France March 11, 2021. Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo
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Le Drian: Failure to Form Lebanese Government is 'Terrible Incident'

French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian speaks during a press conference in Paris, France March 11, 2021. Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo
French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian speaks during a press conference in Paris, France March 11, 2021. Ludovic Marin/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Thursday the failure to form a new Lebanese government was a terrible incident as he criticized the country's entire political class.

Earlier on Thursday, Saad Hariri abandoned his effort to form a new government, dimming hopes of a cabinet being agreed any time soon to start rescuing the country from financial meltdown.

“It is clear we will not be able to agree with his Excellency," Hariri said after meeting President Michel Aoun at Baabda Palace for barely 20 minutes. "That is why I excuse myself from government formation and God help the country."

Hariri said Aoun had requested fundamental changes to a cabinet line-up he had presented to him on Wednesday.

"It is only logical that the prime minister draws his conclusions," Le Drian told reporters at the United Nations in New York.

"It is yet another terrible incident... There is a total inability of the Lebanese leaders to find a solution to the crisis that they have created," he added.



Family of Murdered Libyan Calls for Retrial of Saadi Gaddafi

 
File photo of Saadi Gaddafi (AFP)
File photo of Saadi Gaddafi (AFP)
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Family of Murdered Libyan Calls for Retrial of Saadi Gaddafi

 
File photo of Saadi Gaddafi (AFP)
File photo of Saadi Gaddafi (AFP)

The family of the murdered Libyan footballer Bashir Al-Riani has vowed not to “forfeit his blood” after the country’s Supreme Court overturned the acquittal of Saadi Gaddafi in the case.

The Tripoli Court of Appeals in April 2018 had acquitted the son of the late Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi of charges related to Al-Riani’s torture and murder in 2005. Despite the acquittal, Saadi remained imprisoned until his release on Sept. 6 2021, after which he reportedly left for Turkiye.

In a video statement, Al-Riani’s son announced that the Supreme Court had overturned Saadi’s acquittal and accepted an appeal against it, returning the case to the Tripoli Court of Appeals. He asserted this decision as proof of Saadi’s guilt and vowed to pursue justice until the trial is completed.

While no comment was issued by Saadi’s supporters regarding the Supreme Court’s decision, Ahmed Nashad, a Libyan lawyer and head of the defense team for Abdullah Senussi, former intelligence chief under Gaddafi, explained that overturning Saadi’s acquittal requires a new trial before the Tripoli Court of Appeals.

Al-Riani was found dead in 2005 near Saadi’s seaside residence. Saadi was accused of torturing and killing him, though accounts of the incident vary widely.

In June 2014, former Attorney General Abdelkader Jumaa Radwan referred Saadi’s case to the indictment chamber of the North Tripoli Primary Court after concluding the investigation.

Saadi, 50, was a former football player. He tried in vain to establish a football career in the Italian League, before leading an elite military unit.

Some Libyans, who oppose the Gaddafi regime, say that Saadi heard Al-Riani saying that the man was not talented at football. Meanwhile, another unreliable story states that Al-Riani was drunk and refused to obey Saadi’s guards, so they shot him. This story is denied by the victim’s family.

A former political official close to the Government of National Unity said that Saadi’s release was likely politically motivated, part of broader efforts to free several former regime figures. He noted that many Gaddafi loyalists remain imprisoned despite court orders for their release.