Lebanon’s Hariri replaces chief of staff after election setback

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri speaks to his supporters during a celebration after his bloc won 21 seats in the parliamentary elections. (AP)
Updated 13 May 2018
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Lebanon’s Hariri replaces chief of staff after election setback

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri has replaced his chief of staff after his Future Party lost more than a third of its seats in parliamentary elections a week ago.
The Future Party won 20 seats, down from the 33 won in the country’s last elections held in 2009.
In a post-election speech last week Hariri said the party had been expecting a better result and there had been “gaps” in how it conducted its campaign, for which people would be held responsible.
Hariri’s office announced the resignation of Nader Al-Hariri, a cousin of the prime minister, late on Saturday. It said Mohamed Mnaimne had replaced him in a temporary capacity.
Despite Future’s losses, Hariri is still the frontrunner to form the next government, as the Sunni Muslim leader with the biggest bloc in parliament. Lebanon’s prime minister has to be a Sunni under its sectarian power sharing system.
The Iran-backed Hezbollah group and factions and individuals that support its possession of weapons made significant gains last Sunday, winning more than half the seats in parliament.
Hezbollah’s powerful arsenal has been a point of contention in Lebanon for years.
The staunchly anti-Hezbollah Lebanese Forces won 15 seats, almost doubling their MPs.
The current parliament’s term expires May 20, and difficult negotiations are expected over the division of positions in the new government.


Israel police say two dead in stabbing, car ramming attack

Updated 6 sec ago
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Israel police say two dead in stabbing, car ramming attack

  • The attack came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the West Bank
JERUSALEM: A Palestinian from the Israeli-occupied West Bank killed a man and a woman in a stabbing and car-ramming attack in northern Israel before he was shot and wounded on Friday, Israeli police and rescuers said.
“Preliminary investigation indicates this was a rolling terror attack that began in the city of Beit Shean, where a pedestrian was run over,” the police said in a statement, adding the victim was a 68-year-old man.
“Later, a young woman was stabbed near Road 71, and the suspect was ultimately engaged with gunfire near Maonot Junction in Afula following intervention by a civilian bystander,” it said, adding that the attacker was taken to a hospital.
Both the victims succumbed to the injuries, Israel’s emergency service provider Magen David Adom said in a statement.
MDA also reported that a 16-year-old teenager was slightly injured when “hit by a vehicle.”
The Israeli military said the attacker had “infiltrated into Israeli territory several days ago.”
The attack came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the West Bank.