BEIRUT, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- Lebanon's political
crisis deepened following the resignation of five Lebanon's Shiite cabinet
members over demands for a Hezbollah veto power in the executive authority,
which were vehemently rejected by the ruling majority.
Lebanese President Emile Lahoud said on Sunday that
the government led by Prime Minister Fouad Seniora was not legitimate anymore
after five Shiite ministers resigned on Saturday, the official NNA news agency
reported.
Seniora's government "is not legitimate anymore, and
is opposite to the constitution's principles ... since all the ministers
representing some faction had resigned," Lahoud was quoted by NNA as saying.
The five Shiite ministers were Foreign Minister Fawzi
Salloukh, Labor Minister Tarrad Hamadeh, Health Minister Mohammed Jawad
Khalifeh, Energy and Water Minister Mohammad Fneich and Agriculture Minister
Talal Sahili.
Their resignations came Saturday just followed the
country' stop leaders failed to reach agreement on the formation of a "national
unity" government in which Hezbollah and its allies would have a third-plus-one
veto power.
Hezbollah is calling for the formation of a national
unity government to "face up to the challenges with which Lebanon is
confronted." It wants the inclusion of other political groups, particularly that
of its Christian ally, former General Michel Aoun.
The Shiite group's leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah
warned to take to the streets if round-table talks failed to meet his demands.
Nasrallah has said he wants his Shiite party, which
has two ministers in the cabinet dominated by the ruling anti-Syrian
parliamentary majority, and allies to comprise one-third of the cabinet. That
effectively means that Hezbollah and its allies could veto key decisions.
A two-thirds vote in the cabinet is needed to pass
decisions that are not made by consensus. A resignation of one-third of the
cabinet automatically brings down the government.
"To pave the way for the majority to practice what it
wants freely and so that we don't cover what we are not convinced of ...we
announce the resignation of our representatives in the current cabinet,"
Hezbollah and Amal said in a joint statement.
Prime Minister Fouad Seniora immediately issued a
statement saying that he would not accept the resignations. He "rejects the
resignation of Hezbollah and Amal ministers... and called on them to commit
their responsibilities," said the statement.
"This government respects the constitution and
principles based on dialogue and consensus, and it insists on cooperating with
all parties in order to find solutions which preserve the interests of Lebanon,"
it added.
The resignations also came after Seniora called for
an extraordinary cabinet meeting Monday to endorse the UN draft text of the
international tribunal to try former Premier Rafik Hariri's killers.
The president opposed the meeting, saying he needed
more time to study the draft. However, Lebanon's local An-Nahar newspaper
reported Sunday that despite Lahoud's boycott, the anti-Syrian majority in the
cabinet will meet to "take the right stance."
Last year, the Shiite ministers boycotted cabinet
meetings for several months in a dispute with the majority.
"But it appeared that Saturday's move by Hezbollah
and Amal was not final and aimed instead at shaking the political stalemate to
force the majority to accept Shiite demands," said the paper.
Related:
Lebanese president says gov't not
legitimate anymore
BEIRUT, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- Lebanese President Emile
Lahoud said on Sunday that the government led by Prime Minister Fouad Seniora
was not legitimate anymore after five Shiite ministers resigned on Saturday, the
official NNA news agency reported.
Seniora's government "is not legitimate anymore, and
is opposite to the constitution's principles ... since all the ministers
representing some faction had resigned," NNA quoted Lahoud as saying. Full story>>>
Five Lebanese Shiite ministers quit
from government
BEIRUT, Nov. 11 (Xinhua) -- All five Hezbollah and
ally Amal ministers resigned from Lebanese Premier Fouad Siniora's government,
local television stations reported on Saturday.
The five Shiite ministers include Foreign Minister
Fawzi Salloukh, Labor Minister Tarrad Hamadeh, Health Minister Mohammed Jawad
Khalifeh, Energy and Water Minister Mohammad Fneich and Agriculture Minister
Talal Sahili. Full
story>>>