Plan to Resolve Lebanese Govt. Crisis Is 'Dead on Arrival'; Mikati Won't Resign

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Monday at the Grand Serail. (Dalati & Nohra)
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Monday at the Grand Serail. (Dalati & Nohra)
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Plan to Resolve Lebanese Govt. Crisis Is 'Dead on Arrival'; Mikati Won't Resign

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Monday at the Grand Serail. (Dalati & Nohra)
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Monday at the Grand Serail. (Dalati & Nohra)

Media leaks that a settlement is being concocted to resolve the government crisis has created a stir in Lebanon.

Prime Minister Najib Mikati met with parliament Speaker Nabih Berri on Monday. The normally calm premier left the meeting angrily without speaking to reporters, signaling that no end is in sight to the government crisis.

The cabinet hasn't convened in almost two months after the Amal movement - headed by Berri - and Hezbollah objected to the investigations carried out by Judge Tarek Bitar in the August 2020 Beirut Port explosion.

The Amal and Hezbollah ministers have since been boycotting government meetings and are demanding that course of the investigations be "rectified".

No sooner had leaks of the alleged "settlement" emerged on Monday, that political parties distanced themselves from it. So quick were they abandon the plan that it was not clear who came up with it in the first place.

Berri, meanwhile, told Asharq Al-Awsat that no dispute had erupted between him and Mikati.

My relationship with him is "good", he stressed.

He also dismissed the settlement, details of which had circulated on social media on Monday. The plan had called for the resignation of four judges as a condition for any solution to resolving the government crisis.

Berri dismissed the reports, saying: "This old idea was dropped a long time ago."

He revealed that he did not have information about any settlement.

Later, Mikati's office issued a statement saying that he had expressed to Berri his rejection of any meddling in the work of the judiciary.

He also expressed his adamant rejection of the exploitation of government to interfere in judicial affairs.

His stance has been conveyed to Berri and President Michel Aoun.

Moreover, his office denied reports that Mikati was intending to resign.

The premier will forge ahead with his duties and efforts to resolve the government crisis, it added.

"Any position he takes later will be tied to his national and personal convictions," it said.

The PM had expressed on Monday his support for trying presidents and ministers before the Supreme Council, not the judiciary.

On the port probe, he said that "the government position is clear. Just as we do not meddle in the judiciary, it should respect constitutional frameworks as well" - a reference to his support for presidents and ministers to be tried before the Supreme Council.

"Just as officer are tried before the Military Court, then so should a minister be tried before a special tribunal," he explained.

The port investigations have stalled with ministers and former ministers refusing Bitar's summons. The officials have accused the judge of political bias.

Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah said that the "situation of the judiciary is the worst it has been since the founding of Lebanon."

He accused some judges of seeking to destroy the judiciary.

Amal's Development and Liberation bloc MP Hani Qobeissi said: "So many judges are not seeking justice in our country .. they are instead seeking politics and gains through arbitrary decisions."

He added that they are ignoring forensic evidence in the port blast.



Lebanese President Says Disarmament Decision Has Been Taken

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the Maronite Patriarchate on Easter morning (Lebanese Presidency)
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the Maronite Patriarchate on Easter morning (Lebanese Presidency)
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Lebanese President Says Disarmament Decision Has Been Taken

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the Maronite Patriarchate on Easter morning (Lebanese Presidency)
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the Maronite Patriarchate on Easter morning (Lebanese Presidency)

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun affirmed on Sunday that the decision to confine all arms to the state has already been made, but he emphasized that its enforcement hinges on the “right conditions” to determine the timing and method.
Aoun’s statement came two days after Hezbollah Deputy Secretary-General Naim Qassem firmly rejected any possibility of disarmament. “We will not allow anyone to disarm Hezbollah or the resistance,” Qassem had said in a televised address.
He warned that Hezbollah has “other options,” though he stopped short of specifying them.
Qassem also claimed that Hezbollah has successfully thwarted Israel’s objectives in southern Lebanon, and revealed that “positive messages” had been exchanged with President Aoun regarding the implementation of the ceasefire agreement.

Aoun
Following an Easter Mass and a closed-door meeting with Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi, Aoun reiterated his stance on confining weapons to the state, emphasizing that the matter “should not be debated through media or social platforms, but rather approached with national responsibility and without provocation”.
He added that the nation’s best interest must always come first, reaffirming that his call, as mentioned in his inaugural address, for exclusive state control over arms was not mere words.
“When I spoke of the state’s exclusive right to arms in my oath of office, it wasn’t just words. I said it because I firmly believe that the Lebanese people do not want war and can no longer bear its consequences or even the language of war,” he said.
In addressing the challenges facing this matter and how to reconcile between external pressures on Lebanon and internal calls for a more gradual approach, Aoun said: “We must address the matter responsibly and with composure because it is a sensitive and fundamental matter for preserving civil peace”.
President Joseph Aoun reiterated his call for internal dialogue as the only viable path to resolve contentious national issues, including the question of Hezbollah’s arms. He warned against confrontation, which he said could lead Lebanon toward destruction.
Patriarch Al-Rahi
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi, during his Easter Mass sermon, voiced strong support for Aoun’s position on state sovereignty and the monopoly of arms.
Rahi endorsed Aoun’s message that "only the state can protect us—a strong, sovereign, and just state, born from the will of the Lebanese people and committed to their well-being, peace, and prosperity."