First Published 2008-03-06


The ministers called on Lebanon to elect General Michel Sleiman

 
Arab FMs urge Lebanese to elect president

 
Top Arab diplomats from 22-member league urge Lebanon to set up national unity government.

 
CAIRO - Arab foreign ministers on Wednesday urged feuding Lebanese politicians to elect army chief General Michel Sleiman as their new president ahead of an Arab summit March 29-30.

The top diplomats from the 22-member league made the appeal in a statement at the end of a meeting in Cairo to discuss the protracted Lebanese crisis and preparations for the summit to be hosted by Syria.

The ministers "invite Lebanese leaders to elect the consensus candidate, General Michel Sleiman, at the date which has been set" for his election, to fill a post vacant for more than three months, a statement said.

Lebanon has been without a president since November, when pro-Syrian Emile Lahoud quit at the end of his term.

But efforts to hold a vote in parliament have foundered since September, with 15 sessions scrapped amid fierce disputes between Lebanon's ruling parliamentary majority and the opposition.

A new session has been set for March 11.

Saudi and other Arab leaders have threatened to boycott the summit in Syria if the Lebanese fail to elect a president and resolve their differences.

Egypt and Saudi Arabia accuse Syria of blocking efforts to elect a new president for Lebanon, which was under Syrian military domination for 29 years until Damascus withdrew its troops in 2005.

The Arab ministers also urged the Lebanese leaders "to agree to set up a national unity government as quickly as possible," the statement said.

They also reiterated their support for a three-point Arab rescue plan for Lebanon which calls for the election of Sleiman, the creation of a national unity government in which no party has veto power and a new election law.

Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal and his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki meanwhile held brief talks at Cairo airport on the Lebanese crisis and the Syria summit, airport officials said.

The two men met for nearly 90 minutes, the officials said, adding that Faisal was leaving Egypt at the end of the Arab League meeting while Mottaki was on a stopover in the Egyptian capital. There were no further details.
PrintPrinter Friendly Version


Top

 Blair blasts Britons over Iraq war
 Yemen to keep up Qaeda strikes 'around the clock'
 Israel to raze 200 Palestinian homes in Jerusalem
 Beshir: Sudan ready to normalise ties with Chad
 US solider uses torture practice on own daughter
 Iraq war critic US congressman dies
 Lieberman slams Turkey's 'anti-Israeli' stance
 Iran starts higher uranium enrichment
 Somali rebels warn government against offensive
 Operation Breakfast Redux