Sunday, 27 September 2020

Lebanon Reels After Efforts to Form Government Collapse

Lebanon Reels After Efforts to Form Government Collapse

Features

Asharq Al-Awsat
"My country did this", reads graffiti daubed on walls near the site of a colossal August 4 blast in Beirut that killed 190 people and ravaged large parts of the Lebanese capital | AFP

Lebanon was left reeling Sunday without the slightest prospect of ending multiple crises, after its premier-designate stepped down following the failure of talks to form a government, despite international pressure. Mustapha Adib's resignation on Saturday ended efforts to hammer out a reformist government in the wake of a colossal August 4 explosion in Beirut that killed 190 people, injured thousands, and ravaged large parts of the capital. Political parties had pledged in early September, during a visit to Lebanon by French President Emmanuel Macron, to form within two weeks a cabinet of independent ministers tasked with ending the country's economic malaise. "As the efforts to form a government reached their final phase, it became apparent to me that this consensus... was no longer there," Adib said on Saturday. Under the Lebanese constitution, the president must now hold further talks to nominate another prime minister to form a government, but it is a process that risks dragging out and even failing. "I don't expect a government anytime soon," said Sami Atallah, who heads the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies. "There was a chance, there was a lot of pressure to form a government and it didn't happen," he said, adding there was a "bigger problem" of geopolitical tensions, especially between the United States and Iran. Adib's efforts were hampered by the claims of two Shiite formations, the Iran-backed Hezbollah movement, and its ally Amal, led by parliament speaker Nabih Berri, who demanded the finance portfolio. According to observers, the Shiite allies dug in their heels after recent US sanctions imposed on a minister of the Amal party and two companies affiliated with Hezbollah. - 'Into the unknown' - Adib's decision to step aside 26 days after his appointment has left the people of Lebanon feeling as though they are back to square one. Earlier this week, Lebanese President Michel Aoun warned the country was headed to "hell" unless all political parties stepped up and facilitated the formation of a government. Even before the devastating Beirut port blast, the country was already mired in its worst economic crisis in decades and mass protests that toppled and replaced the government. Following the August 4 blast, the country's worst peacetime disaster, the government stepped down and Adib was appointed to form a new one. Many are worried the country is headed from bad to worse. The UN envoy to Lebanon, Jan Kubis, on Saturday reacted with disbelief: "Such a degree of irresponsibility, when the fate of Lebanon and its people is at stake!" "Politicians, have you really scuppered this unique chance created by France?" Analyst Karim Bitar said Lebanon was expected to have a rough patch ahead. "Even if Lebanon is not hell-bound, we will probably witness... the weakening of public institutions, a worsening of the economic crisis... and a wave of emigration," he said.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://english.aawsat.com/home/article/2532086/lebanon-reels-after-efforts-form-government-collapse

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