Khazen

Ex-general returns to Lebanon

Ex-general returns to Lebanon

By Hassan M. Fattah The New York Times


BEIRUT Michel Aoun, a former army general who inspires nationalist support in the street among many Christians and unease among some of the long-entrenched elite, has returned to this city after 15 years in exile, promising to remake Lebanon’s politics.


The return of the general, a Maronite Christian who opposed Syria’s dominance, closes the chapter on that country’s control of Lebanon and opens a new one as Lebanon faces the daunting challenges left by Syria’s withdrawal.


His arrival Saturday, just two weeks after Syrian forces left, was part victory march, part bittersweet homecoming. Posters in Christian parts of the city hailed him as a “resister” and a “liberator.”


“Today is a victory for sovereignty, and a return for a Lebanese,” Aoun said after he arrived on a flight from France.


From the airport, the general drove to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and on to the grave of a former prime minister, Rafik Hariri, before moving to Martyrs’ Square nearby, where thousands of his supporters, wearing the orange of their Free Patriotic Movement, gathered to hear his address.


“This is our march, our path,” said Bob Ghorayeb, 25, who with several friends was selling copies of Aoun’s biography at the rally. “He was a nationalist and he worked in the interest of the whole country. It’s time for a political change like that.”

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Aoun’s return a key moment

Aoun’s return a key moment


By Kim Ghattas
BBC News, Beirut


For 14 years, his supporters covered Beirut’s walls with graffiti reading: “Aoun will return”.


Now Michel Aoun, a former army commander-in-chief and one time prime minister is back in Beirut after years of exile in France. Members of his party, the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), worked relentlessly this week to plan a huge celebration on Martyrs’ Square, in the heart of the city.


Over the last few months, the square has seen hundreds of thousands of Lebanese demonstrate to demand the truth about the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, killed in a massive explosion on 14 February, and to ask for the departure of Syrian troops.

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Anti-Syrian Leader Returns to Lebanon

Anti-Syrian Leader Returns to Lebanon


By ZEINA KARAM, Associated Press Writer


BEIRUT, Lebanon – Anti-Syrian leader Michel Aoun returned to Lebanon Saturday to the cheers of thousands of his supporters, ending his 14-year exile in France less than two weeks after Syrian troops withdrew from Lebanon.


Aoun, a one-time army commander and interim Lebanese prime minister, lost a “war of liberation” against Syrian forces in 1989-90. He was sent into exile in France, but an arrest warrant against him was dropped earlier in the week, clearing the way for his return.


“Today is a day of happiness and joy,” he said at a news conference at Beirut airport. “Lebanon has been under a black cloud that enslaved it for 15 years. Today, there is a sun of freedom. I am coming to look to the future and to build Lebanon together” with the Lebanese.

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Cheikh Farid Elias El Khazen (PROFILE)

According to official results of The 2005 Elections in Mount Lebanon , the list of General Michel Aoun scored a sweeping victory in the regions Keserwan and Jbeil. The results also show that Cheikh Farid Elias El Khazen , a member of The Khazen Family scored 56719 votes , being fourth on Aoun’s list . Profile of […]

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Exiled Christian politician Aoun returns to Lebanon

Exiled Christian politician Aoun returns to Lebanon


PARIS (AFP) – After 15 years in exile, Lebanon’s Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun was to leave Paris to return to his native land, where highly anticipated legislative elections are due to take place on May 29.


“It will be a historic day, full of emotion and joy,” Aoun, Lebanon’s former armed forces chief, told reporters in Paris earlier this week.


Late last month, Syria — which forced Aoun to leave Lebanon in the first place — ended its 29-year military presence in the country, paving the way for him to make a triumphant return.


Making no effort to hide his political ambitions, the 70-year-old told AFP last month that he would be prepared to assume Lebanon’s presidency should a “national consensus” emerge in his favor.


 

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Explosion Reportedly Kills One in Lebanon

Explosion Reportedly Kills One in Lebanon


By HUSSEIN DAKROUB, Associated Press Writer


JOUNIEH, Lebanon – An explosion ravaged a shopping area and set off a fire near a Christian religious radio station in the port city of Jounieh north of Beirut late Friday, reportedly killing at least one person on the eve of the return from exile of Lebanon’s most prominent anti-Syrian politician.


President Emile Lahoud condemned the attack and indicated a link between the explosion and political developments expected Saturday, likely referring to Parliament’s possible discussion of a divisive election law and the return of Michel Aoun

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Lebanon to hold four-phase polls from May 29

Lebanon to hold four-phase polls from May 29


Reuters 
 
Beirut: Lebanon’s president approved yesterday a government decision to hold general elections in four rounds between May 29 and June 19 under a controversial electoral law, officials said.


They said President Emile Lahoud issued a decree confirming the dates already agreed by the government last week.


Lebanese officials have been under international pressure to hold the elections on time despite a political crisis sparked by the February 14 assassination of former prime minister Rafik Hariri.

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Lebanon hopes to lure tourists after bomb

Lebanon hopes to lure tourists after bomb


BEIRUT (Reuters) – Beirut’s luxury hotels have patched up the damage from a huge bombing that plunged the country into turmoil and opened their doors again hoping to lure back tourists in time for the summer.


The Feb. 14 blast that killed former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri shattered the windows and blew in the doors of hotels lining the coast, forcing them to close for some two months.


Now that Syria has pulled its troops out of Lebanon after 29 years and the country is looking forward to May elections that had been threatened by political upheaval, hopes are high Arab visitors will return to their favorite regional destination.

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Before Aoun’s ‘tsunami,’ a wilderness of suspicions

Before Aoun’s ‘tsunami,’ a wilderness of suspicions


By Michael Young
Daily Star staff
Thursday, May 05, 2005


So Michel Aoun returns this weekend, promising a tsunami, as he recently put it. It was typical that he failed to see, in the shadow of the East Asian killer wave, the inelegance of those words. The general surfs in on a swell of ambition, the kind that reportedly makes him believe he can cut a deal with President Emile Lahoud, to better dispose of him once Aoun is inside the walls.


Events in the past days have been confusing, even by the tortuous standards of Lebanese political life. No one has come out looking good. What is going on? Depending on which side you hear, fragments of narratives are emerging. For a confederacy of Christian former Syrian allies, at the top of which stands Lahoud, but also Deputy Parliament Speaker Michel Murr, his son Elias, the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation, and others, the controversial agreement last week that the election law of 2000 would govern the forthcoming elections at the end of May was a case of Christians being stabbed in the back. They underline, probably with some merit, that the deal came following an alliance between Walid Jumblatt, Saadeddine Hariri, Amal and Hizbullah.


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