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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lahhoud refuses to resign
2005-03-21
"Nope. Nope. Ain't gonna do it."
President Emile Lahoud will not bow to pressure from the anti-Syrian opposition to resign, a senior aide said Sunday as the crisis in Lebanon deepens since the Feb. 14 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Lahoud's media adviser stressed the president can be forced to step down only if he is impeached by Parliament for either violation of the constitution or high treason. "Since these two matters have not occurred ... this issue is out of the question for the president," Rafik Shalala told The Associated Press. Lahoud, Shalala said, "will not relinquish power and leave a constitutional vacuum in the country."
"Instead he'll remain in power and hope the whole thing blows over."
Lebanon's president is elected by Parliament. On Saturday, the Druse leader Walid Jumblatt, who is leading the opposition campaign against Syria's military and political role in Lebanon, renewed his call for Lahoud to step down as a way out of the political crisis. "Unless a new president is elected from the current Parliament - and there are many opposition legislators who are qualified to lead the country - the future may be unknown," Jumblatt said in a speech to supporters. Only Jumblatt and four other legislators - and not the entire opposition - have demanded Lahoud's resignation.
But Wally's currently the most prominent opposition figure, even if not the most well-beloved...
Lebanon's most prominent anti-Syrian opposition leader, former army commander Gen. Michel Aoun, said from France that he is against Lahoud's resignation for now because the current 128-member legislature, packed with Syria's supporters, can elect a new president loyal to Damascus. "We do not want to bring the president down under the present Parliament because this Parliament can immediately elect a pro-Syrian president," Aoun said in a statement published Sunday by An-Nahar newspaper.
I don't think Wally actually wants him to step down yet, either. But isolating Lahoud enhances the opposition position in the upcoming elections. It also draws a more distinct line between who's on which side.
Also Sunday, an eight-member delegation from the U.S. Congress visited Lebanon briefly to pay condolences to Hariri's family and meet opposition figures. "The purpose of our visit to Lebanon, as a congressional delegation, is to say to the people of Lebanon that the world is watching," said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, of California, who headed the delegation. The delegation demanded a full withdrawal of Syrian troops. U.N. envoy Terje Roed-Larsen also called for calm in Lebanon, saying he is worried that another Lebanese leader might be assassinated, An-Nahar reported Sunday. He did not name the leader.
That'd be Wally he's not naming...
The president on Saturday decided to stay away from an Arab summit in Algeria, citing "exceptional circumstances" after a car bomb rocked a Christian neighborhood in Beirut, injuring nine people and raising the specter of renewed violence.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#3  Funny, if Pelosi had her way, Hezbullah would run Lebenon and Syria was just doing a fine job of policing Lebanon. It was only AFTER that she saw the demonstrations that she suddenly became a supporter of Democracy in Lebanon.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-03-21 1:35:06 PM  

#2  "Ok,Ok. Almost anyone."
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-03-21 1:12:19 PM  

#1  "The People™ love me. Ask anyone."
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-03-21 12:55:13 PM  

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