Lebanon: 'Hezbollah' Asks Aoun to Postpone Consultations to Try Persuade Hariri

President Michel Aoun meets with a delegation of the Arab League, headed by Ambassador Hossam Zaki
President Michel Aoun meets with a delegation of the Arab League, headed by Ambassador Hossam Zaki
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Lebanon: 'Hezbollah' Asks Aoun to Postpone Consultations to Try Persuade Hariri

President Michel Aoun meets with a delegation of the Arab League, headed by Ambassador Hossam Zaki
President Michel Aoun meets with a delegation of the Arab League, headed by Ambassador Hossam Zaki

In parallel with the growing financial and economic crisis, political consultations to nominate a new prime minister are still facing a deadlock, with the insistence of Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) to name caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri to head the next government, while the latter refuses to form it on their conditions.

Political discussions between the blocs did not result in any breach in terms of speeding up the binding parliamentary consultations to choose a new prime minister - a political measure that economists see as a “recipe for calming fears” and stabilizing the monetary and economic situation.

Binding parliamentary consultations, which President Michel Aoun is yet to call for, are blocked by the insistence of the FPM and Hezbollah to nominate Hariri to the premiership and the latter’s rejection to head a techno-political cabinet that would meet the two parties’ terms.

Political sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Hezbollah communicated with Aoun, asking him to postpone the consultations. They added that the FPM and Hezbollah were still betting that Hariri would change his mind.

Meanwhile, Aoun, received on Thursday the Assistant Secretary-General of the Arab League, Ambassador Hossam Zaki.

He stressed that he was maintaining efforts to reach an understanding over the new government.

“The current situation cannot bear implying conditions and counter-conditions. We must work together to get out of the current crisis in a way that serves interests of the Lebanese and contributes to solving the difficult economic conditions,” Aoun said.

Aoun noted that he supported the majority of demands raised by the popular movement, emphasizing that he already submitted law proposals pertaining to combating corruption, activating reforms, preventing waste, and lifting immunity.

Also on Thursday, Hezbollah’s Loyalty to the Resistance parliamentary bloc called on the caretaker government to assume its duties in running the country’s affairs.

In a statement following its weekly meeting, the bloc said the government should shoulder its responsibilities towards the Lebanese people, especially in light of the financial crisis and the deterioration of the national currency.



Sudan’s Humanitarian Crisis Worsens amid Escalating Violence

FILE - People prepare local crops of sugar cane and watermelons for sale, at Abu Shouk refugee camp, where they live on the outskirts of El Fasher, North Darfur, Sudan, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/John Heilprin, File)
FILE - People prepare local crops of sugar cane and watermelons for sale, at Abu Shouk refugee camp, where they live on the outskirts of El Fasher, North Darfur, Sudan, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/John Heilprin, File)
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Sudan’s Humanitarian Crisis Worsens amid Escalating Violence

FILE - People prepare local crops of sugar cane and watermelons for sale, at Abu Shouk refugee camp, where they live on the outskirts of El Fasher, North Darfur, Sudan, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/John Heilprin, File)
FILE - People prepare local crops of sugar cane and watermelons for sale, at Abu Shouk refugee camp, where they live on the outskirts of El Fasher, North Darfur, Sudan, Oct. 8, 2010. (AP Photo/John Heilprin, File)

Fighting in Sudan's Kordofan region that has killed hundreds and ongoing violence in Darfur — the epicenters of the country's conflict — have worsened Sudan's humanitarian crisis, with aid workers warning of limited access to assistance.

The United Nations said more than 450 civilians, including at least 35 children, were killed during the weekend of July 12 in attacks in villages surrounding the town of Bara in North Kordofan province.

“The suffering in Kordofan deepens with each passing day,” Mercy Corps Country Director for Sudan Kadry Furany said in a statement shared with The Associated Press. “Communities are trapped along active and fast changing front lines, unable to flee, unable to access basic needs or lifesaving assistance.”

Sudan plunged into war after simmering tensions between the army and its rival, the Rapid Support Forces, or RSF, escalated to fighting in April 2023. The violence has killed at least 40,000 people and created one of the world’s worst displacement and hunger crises, according to humanitarian organizations. In recent months, much of the fighting has been concentrated in the Darfur and Kordofan regions.

On Thursday, the UN human rights office confirmed that since July 10, the RSF has killed at least 60 civilians in the town of Bara, while civil society groups reported up to 300 people were killed, the office said.

A military airstrike on Thursday in Bara killed at least 11 people, all from the same family, according to the UN office. Meanwhile, between July 10 and 14, the army killed at least 23 civilians and injured over two dozen others after striking two villages in West Kordofan.

An aid worker with Mercy Corps said his brother was fatally shot on July 13 during an attack on the village of Um Seimima in El Obeid City in North Kordofan, Grace Wairima Ndungu, the group’s communications manager told AP.

Furany said that movement between the western and eastern areas of the Kordofan region is “practically impossible.”

The intensified fighting forced Mercy Corps to temporarily suspend operations in three out of four localities, with access beyond Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan, now being in “serious doubt,” Furany said, as a safe sustained humanitarian corridor is needed.

Mathilde Vu, an aid worker with the Norwegian Refugee Council who is often based in Port Sudan, told the AP that fighting has intensified in North Kordofan and West Kordofan over the past several months.

“A large number of villages are being destroyed, burned to the ground, people being displaced,” she said. “What is extremely worrying about the Kordofan is that there is very little information and not a lot of organizations are able to support. It is a complete war zone there.”

Marwan Taher, head of mission with humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders, told the AP that military operations in Kordofan heightened insecurity, prompting scores of people to flee to Darfur, a region already in a dire humanitarian situation.

The NRC said that since April, Tawila has already received 379,000 people escaping violence in famine-hit Zamzam Camp and Al Fasher.

Meanwhile, the International Organization for Migration recently reported that over 46,000 people were displaced from different areas in West Kordofan in May alone due to clashes between warring parties.

Taher said those fleeing El Fasher to Tawila walk long distances with barely enough clothes and little water, and sleep on the streets until they arrive at the area they want to settle in. The new wave of displacement has brought diseases, including measles, which began spreading in parts of Zalingi in Central Darfur in March and April as camps received people fleeing Kordofan.

Aid workers also warned about ongoing fighting in Darfur. Vu said there have been “uninterrupted campaigns of destruction” against civilians in North Darfur.
“In Darfur there’s been explicit targeting of civilians. There’s been explicit execution,” she said.

Shelling killed five children Wednesday in El Fasher in North Darfur, according to UN spokesperson Stephanie Tremblay. Meanwhile, between July 14 and 15, heavy rains and flooding displaced over 400 people and destroyed dozens of homes in Dar As Salam, North Darfur.

With a looming rainy season, a cholera outbreak and food insecurity, the situation in Darfur is “getting worse every day and that’s what war is,” said Taher.