Lebanon’s former prime minister, Saad Hariri, has snapped back at President Michel Aoun over accusations of granting “immunity” to some personalities.
Hariri’s visitors said Friday that the former PM “does not distribute immunity to anyone and rejects becoming a barricade to any assault on public funds.”
He made his remarks after Aoun was quoted as saying by Asharq Al-Awsat that the former premier was seeking to grant “immunity” to certain figures.
“Anyone who is proven to be linked to any violations or negligence in protecting public money, shall be held accountable,” the president told his visitors.
But Hariri responded in remarks published by Mustaqbal Web news site by saying that Aoun should recall his “protectorates” before launching his accusations.
Hariri cited “electricity, customs, corruption in the judiciary and others.”
In his remarks to his visitors, Aoun also lashed out at the finance ministry and the central bank, saying they were responsible for the country’s financial crisis that helped spur an anti-government protest on Oct. 17.
But former Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil issued a statement saying the ministry has regulated public finances after 13 years of failure to approve public budgets.
He said the electricity plan had forced the state to spend more than its treasury can handle.
The energy ministry had been led in the past years by ministers belonging to the Free Patriotic Movement that is founded by Aoun.