Lebanon MPs fail for sixth time to elect president

Lebanon’s parliament has previously failed to elect a president five times. (File/AFP)
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Updated 17 November 2022
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Lebanon MPs fail for sixth time to elect president

  • Hezbollah deputies submit blank ballots, leaving country without a head of state for another week

BEIRUT: Lebanese MPs failed for a sixth time on Thursday to elect a president and fill the void left by Michel Aoun, who ended his term last month without replacement.

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced that a seventh vote would be held next Thursday, bringing to 24 the minimum number of days without a head of state.

A total of 112 MPs cast ballots on Thursday, from a total of 128. Independent MP Michel Mouawad received 43 and academic Issam Khalifeh received seven. One vote was cast for former MP and presidential candidate Sleiman Frangieh. 

Ziad Baroud, a former minister, received three. MP Michel Daher, a non-Maronite who did not submit his candidacy, received one vote, and two ballots were canceled.

However, 46 blank votes were cast by Hezbollah, and nine were given to “New Lebanon.” Parliament is split between supporters of Hezbollah and its opponents. 

The votes for Mouawad, whose candidacy is opposed by Hezbollah, was far fewer than the two-thirds needed for outright election in the first round. Hezbollah and their Amal allies then withdrew from the session, resulting in the loss of quorum and spiking any chance of a second round of voting.

Kataeb MP Sami Gemayel started the session with a question on why a two-thirds quorum was needed in a second round, when the constitution stipulated that an absolute majority was sufficient.

Berri said that sessions always required a two-thirds quorum.  The speaker added that a two-thirds majority was needed for the election of the president in the first round and an absolute majority was sufficient for the second.

Georges Adwan, Lebanese Forces MP, supported Berri’s commitment to the two-thirds quorum. However, he added: “How come the deputies who do not attend the electoral sessions are not subject to legal consequences?”

Mouawad’s votes declined by one from the previous vote on Wednesday. “We are working to reach consensus with reformist deputies who did not vote for me,” he said, adding that the battle “we are fighting today is between those who want to have a purely Lebanese electoral process and those who are waiting for the secret word from outside.”

Hezbollah’s MPs, who continued to cast blank votes, did not participate in the quorum dispute. “The candidate we want has to be sovereign and we don’t want a president that stabs the resistance in the back,” one was quoted as saying.

Progressive Socialist Party MP Bilal Abdallah said that “casting a blank vote shuts down dialogue.”

He added: “Apparently, some political blocs got used to playing on the brink of an abyss when it comes to important matters. We hope that the national interest will prevail soon without waiting for external signals.”

Gebran Bassil, head of the Free Patriotic Movement, was in Paris and did not attend the electoral session. He said that the FPM was talking with all interested parties, but ruled out support for Frangieh, saying he was an ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad.


Inaction over UAE’s role is prolonging ‘worst proxy war in the world,’ Sudan justice minister says

Updated 58 min 44 sec ago
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Inaction over UAE’s role is prolonging ‘worst proxy war in the world,’ Sudan justice minister says

  • Had international community characterized it as ‘military rebellion’ and countered Emirati sponsorship of ‘terrorist militia’ it would not have endured, he tells UN Human Rights Council
  • He accuses paramilitary Rapid Support forces of ‘targeting basic infrastructure, strategic facilities and public services,’ and ‘atrocities beyond our capacity to describe’

NEW YORK CITY: Sudan’s justice minister on Wednesday blamed the prolongation of the near-three-year conflict in his country on what he described as the failure of the international community to properly label the war as a rebellion.

He also accused the UAE of sponsoring and arming a militia, the Rapid Support Forces, he said was responsible for widespread abuses.

“The war has outstayed its welcome and it should not have gone on for this long had the international community, and particularly the UN and its bodies, fulfilled their responsibility in rightly characterizing this military rebellion,” said Abdullah Mohammed Dirif, “and had they called a spade a spade and countered the Abu Dhabi government, which sponsored this terrorist militia and provided it with high-tech arms and provided it with mercenaries.”

Speaking during the high-level segment of the 61st session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, he warned that “the misleading characterization of this war has given a green light for the militia to keep its flagrant violations.”

The minister, who said he was speaking “on behalf of the government of Sudan and its people,” described the conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the RSF, which began in April 2023, as “one of the worst proxy wars in the world,” which had “targeted the very existence of Sudan and its people.”

The RSF has “continued its methodic targeting of basic infrastructure and strategic facilities and all public services,” Dirif said, adding that “the aim is to displace civilians against whom it has committed atrocities beyond our capacity to describe them.

“The violations and crimes of the militia are going unabated. Yesterday it invaded Moustahiliya region in northern Darfur. It targeted civilians, killed them. It looted. It scorched villages and cities.”

Sudan’s military was “conducting its constitutional responsibility by standing up to the militia, protecting the civilians, preserving the unity of the country and the rule of law,” he said, and it remains “committed to international humanitarian law and the rules governing military engagement, and taking into account proportionality principles in order to protect civilians.”

Khartoum remains “open to genuine efforts which aim to end the war and the rebellion” based on a road map presented by the president of the Transitional Sovereignty Council, and a peace initiative submitted by the prime minister to the UN Security Council on Dec. 22, he added.

Dirif stressed his government’s commitment to continued “cooperation and coordination with human rights mechanisms in Sudan,” including the presence of the UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in the country and the UN special rapporteur on the human rights situation in Sudan.

“We recall, nationally, that achieving justice and redress to victims and ensuring impunity is a top priority for us,” he said, adding that authorities had made progress by investigating violations of national laws and international humanitarian laws.

He also underscored Sudan’s “commitment to continue facilitating and expediting delivery of humanitarian assistance to those affected by the war, including those under the control of the rebellious militia.”

Later, Sudan’s representative to the UN in Geneva exercised his right of reply and responded to prior remarks by the representative from the UAE.

“This is not a mere accusation, it is a well-known fact that is predicated on a number of evidence and documented proofs,” he said, referring to the UAE’s sponsorship of the RSF.

He cited in particular a report by a UN panel of experts on Sudan published on Jan. 15, 2024, which he described as “an official document of the Security Council” that referred to “lines of transferring weapons from Abu Dhabi International Airport” based on “clear-cut evidence.”

Other major international organizations and Sudan’s national commission of inquiry have provided further proof, he added, and Khartoum had submitted “a number of complaints, with proof, to the Security Council of the proven sabotage by the Abu Dhabi authority.”

The Sudanese representative continued: “It is paradoxical that the same authority that is sponsoring criminal militia, that the whole world is seeing and is attesting to its crimes, is now talking about peace in the Sudan. Peace is a noble value, that you have to be full of peace before you talk about it.

“The people of Sudan are only requesting this country stop sponsoring this criminal militia that is killing the innocent people in my country on a daily basis.”

The UAE has denied accusations that it provides military support to armed groups in Sudan, and says it supports efforts to achieve a peaceful resolution to the conflict.