Hariri to meet Macron in Paris on Saturday; Aoun sees 'start of a solution'

In this Sept. 1 2017 file photo, French President Emmanuel Macron, right, shakes hands with Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri during a joint press conference at the Elysee Palace in Paris. Hariri has accepted an invitation to come to France after his surprise resignation nearly two weeks ago. (Ludovic Marin, Pool via AP, File)
Updated 16 November 2017
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Hariri to meet Macron in Paris on Saturday; Aoun sees 'start of a solution'

PARIS: Lebanon’s prime minister Saad Al-Hariri will arrive in France on Saturday and meet French President Emmanuel Macron, a source inside the French presidency said.
Macron invited the Lebanese premier and his family to France on Wednesday, hoping to soothe a crisis triggered when Hariri announced his resignation 12 days ago.
Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun said Hariri’s decision to accept an invitation to Paris is the “start of a solution” to the crisis sparked by his resignation.
Hariri has been in Riyadh since announcing his shock resignation from there on November 4.
“We hope that the crisis is over and Hariri’s acceptance of the invitation to go to France is the start of a solution,” Aoun said on the official presidential Twitter account.
“I am awaiting the return of Prime Minister Hariri from Paris for us to decide the next step with regards to the government,” Aoun added.


14 migrants drown off Turkiye after chase ends in deadly collision

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14 migrants drown off Turkiye after chase ends in deadly collision

  • Search and rescue operations were continuing by land, sea and air to locate any remaining people who may still be missing

ANKARA: At least 14 migrants drowned on Monday after a boat carrying them collided with a coast guard boat off Turkiye’s Mediterranean coast during a chase, officials said.
The incident occurred near the coast of Demre, in Antalya province, as the vessel carrying Afghans ignored calls to stop and attempted maneuvers at high-speed to escape the coast guard boats, the state-run Anadolu Agency quoted Gov. Hulusi Sahin as saying.
Seven people were rescued from the sea by coast guard teams and given immediate medical care, Sahin said. Fourteen others who reached the shore were detained by gendarmerie units.
Search and rescue operations were continuing by land, sea and air to locate any remaining people who may still be missing.
Authorities have launched both a judicial and an administrative investigation into the incident, Anadolu said.
Separately, Turkiye ‌has drawn up plans to deal with a potential inflow of people fleeing ​the war in neighboring Iran, Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci said on Wednesday, with preparations including possible buffer zones along the frontier and tent camps.
There was currently no unusual movement at the three border gates along ‌the Iran-Turkiye ‌border, Ciftci added.
Speaking ​in ‌Ankara, ⁠Ciftci ​said three ⁠contingency plans had been drawn up by authorities: managing any potential migrant flow on the Iranian side of the border; creating buffer zones along the frontier if movement cannot ⁠be stopped; and letting people ‌into Turkiye ‌under controlled conditions.
He added ​that Turkiye had ‌prepared initial capacity to host up ‌to 90,000 people in the event of a sudden inflow, including tent camps and temporary accommodation sites.
On Monday, hundreds of Iranians crossed the border into Turkiye. ⁠Others were reportedly waiting to cross. Ciftci said authorities had been informed that Iran was restricting its own citizens from leaving the country, while allowing Turkish nationals and third-country citizens to exit.