Lebanon’s MPs to try again to elect Aoun’s successor

Jihad Azour is a former minister and the director of the International Monetary Fund’s Middle East and Central Asia department. (AFP/File)
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Updated 12 June 2023
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Lebanon’s MPs to try again to elect Aoun’s successor

  • Azour, Frangieh announce candidacy for presidency
  • Jean-Yves Le Drian, French envoy, arrives in Beirut next week for key talks

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s MPs will try on Wednesday for the 12th time to elect a successor to Michel Aoun whose presidential term ended in October.
Former ministers Suleiman Frangieh and Jihad Azour officially announced their candidacy for the presidency two days prior to the 12th scheduled parliamentary voting session.
The Maronite Patriarchate has declared that it remains “equidistant from all candidates.”
Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib announced on Monday that Jean-Yves Le Drian, the French envoy tasked with Lebanese affairs, will arrive in Beirut next week to initiate consultations regarding the presidential issue.
Sunni MPs — which number 27 out of 128 MPs — are not expected to play a decisive role as their votes are divided between candidates, with Azour’s camp, including the Christian blocs, opposing Hezbollah.
Azour said in a statement on Monday that he was “not a confrontational candidate or a product of partisan experimentation, with full respect for Lebanese parties.”
He added: “I am not a champion of one sect against another or against other sects.”
Azour views his candidacy as “an invitation to unity, breaking up alignments, and seeking common ground in order to overcome the crisis.”
He added: “It is true that Lebanon’s problems are not easily solved, but they are treatable.
“Don’t you see that we are preoccupied with divisive speeches and intimidating each other, while our country is completely isolated from all paths of reconciliation, rapprochement, and the ongoing developments in the region?”
Azour emphasized that he belongs to the “school of dialogue and convergence.”
He added: “I am extending a hand to include all components and political forces that are partners in the nation, based on the principle of convergence to achieve a national consensus that Lebanon needs more than ever before.”
He stressed the need for “complete independence from any external interference; protecting the land and full sovereignty; restoring the prestige of the state and its institutions; adhering to the constitution; and fortifying the Document of National Accord by implementing it in its entirety, as it is the superior common ground and the true basis for coexistence.”
He added: “I will work in cooperation with everyone to reconnect what has been severed with our Arab surroundings and with other countries in the world.”
It was announced last week that Azour had temporarily relinquished his duties as the director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the International Monetary Fund to avoid any perception of conflicting interests.
His rival Frangieh, who leads the Marada Movement — and is supported by Hezbollah, the Amal Movement and its allies — officially announced his candidacy on Sunday evening.
He said: “If I become president, I will be a president for all Lebanese.”
He has expressed concern over the “inability to elect a president under these circumstances.”
He added: “We are heading toward political divisions.”
Frangieh has criticized his opponents and former minister Ziad Baroud, the choice of some parliamentary blocs.
Frangieh has avoided discussing his stance on Hezbollah’s weapons, defensive strategy, the Syrian refugee issue, and his plans to address the economic situation.
MP Bilal Hashimi, a supporter of Azour’s candidacy, told Arab News: “Indecisive MPs must shoulder their responsibilities, especially since there is no longer enough time for maneuvering or choosing a third candidate or resorting to casting a blank ballot.”
Hashimi also warned that Hezbollah’s team will continue to “maneuver and exploit time until we surrender as an opposition, as has happened in the past.”
The head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, MP Mohammed Raad, accused Azour’s supporters of “intending to present a candidate who competes with the resistance faction, using him only to prevent the resistance’s candidate from reaching the presidency.”


Katz orders West Bank raid after deadly attack in Israel

Israeli soldiers walk during a raid in the occupied-West Bank city of Qabatiya, north of Jenin, on February 23, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 26 December 2025
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Katz orders West Bank raid after deadly attack in Israel

  • Friday’s stabbing and car-ramming attack in northern Israel triggered the minister’s action

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz on Friday ordered the military to launch an operation in the village of Qabatiya in the occupied West Bank after it emerged that a Palestinian who killed two people came from there.
The minister instructed the Israeli forces to “act forcefully and immediately against the village of Qabatiya, from which the murderous terrorist emerged, in order to locate and thwart every terrorist and strike the village’s terror infrastructure,” Katz’s office said in a statement.
“Anyone who aids terrorism or sponsors and backs it will pay the full price,” it added.

BACKGROUND

Friday’s attack comes just days after Israeli soldiers shot dead a Palestinian teenager in the Qabatiya area.

The military said in a separate statement that it was preparing to begin an operation in Qabatiya in the northern West Bank, which has seen repeated violent incidents.
Friday’s stabbing and car-ramming attack in northern Israel triggered the minister’s action.
The assault came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the West Bank, where violence has surged since the war in Gaza began.
“Preliminary investigation indicates this was a rolling terror attack that began in the city of Beit Shean, where a pedestrian was run over,” Israeli police said in a statement about Friday’s attack, adding that 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 hospital.
Both victims succumbed to the injuries, Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency services said in a statement.
MDA also reported that a 16-year-old was slightly injured when “hit by a vehicle.
The Israeli military said the attacker had “infiltrated into Israeli territory several days ago.”
President Isaac Herzog condemned the attack.
Friday’s attack comes just days after Israeli soldiers shot dead a Palestinian teenager in the Qabatiya area.
The military has launched an investigation into the incident after footage emerged showing the teenager not posing any threat or throwing anything at soldiers who shot him.
The attack on Friday also came a day after an Israeli military reservist dressed in civilian clothes rammed his vehicle into a Palestinian man in the 
West Bank.
In videos on social media purporting to show that incident, the victim is seen praying by the roadside when the soldier rams him with his vehicle.