Khazen

Lebanon celebrates 66th Independance Day (In pictures)

 

 
Lebanon‘s President Michel Suleiman (L) reviews army troops with Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Elias al-Murr during a military parade to celebrate the 66th anniversary of Lebanon‘s independence day in downtown Beirut November 22, 2009. REUTERS/Dalati

 

 
 

Lebanon‘s President Michel Suleiman (C), Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (L) and Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri (R) stand during a military parade to celebrate the 66th anniversary of Lebanon‘s independence day in downtown Beirut November 22, 2009. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir (LEBANON ANNIVERSARY POLITICS)

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Lebanese President proposes changing electoral law relating to general elections.

Lebanese President General Michel Suleiman proposes changing electoral law relating to general elections.

BEIRUT – President Michel Sleiman called in a television speech on Saturday for the establishment of a committee to work towards the abolition of religion-based politics in Lebanon.

"To encourage vast participation (in political life), a national committee should be established and charged with abolishing confessionalism in politics," he said in a speech marking Sunday’s 66th anniversary of independence.

Sleiman also proposed "changing the electoral law relating to general elections in order to obtain better representation and restore to expatriates their rights, including nationality and the right to vote."

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A smoke-free Lebanon: Reality or pipedream?

Lebanon, Beirut (CNN) — In Lebanon, you’re never far from the whiff of cigarette smoke.

In restaurants and cafes, on the streets, in the airport and even in elevators, Lebanese delight in lighting up. The World Health Organization (WHO) says Lebanon has one of the highest smoking rates in the world.

"We are a tobacco-friendly society," says cardiologist Dr. Georges Saade, a former WHO official who now heads the Tobacco Control Project at Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.

Saade is a committed anti-smoking campaigner and for years he’s fought an uphill battle for funding to increase awareness of the risks of smoking.

The ministry estimates that if attitudes towards smoking don’t change, this small nation of 4 million will experience at least 3,000 tobacco-related deaths each year.

Do you live in Lebanon? Would you welcome a ban on smoking in public places there? Tell us below in the SoundOff box

It’s not a smoking culture. This is freedom culture.
–Tony, a Lebanese smoker in his early 30s

On a cool autumn night, Saade, his wife and their 5-year-old son walk through the streets Beirut’s renovated downtown; the intermittent odors of cigarette and water-pipe smoke wafting through the air.

Water-pipe — also known as hookah, shisha or nargileh – is a popular form of social smoking.

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MP Farid Elias El Khazen and unity government

رأى أن أمام اللبنانيين فرصة حقيقية لإعادة بناء الدولة

النائب  فريد الخازن "للأنباء" :

ـ تكتل "التغيير والإصلاح" لديه النية الحسنة والإرادة الكاملة للتعاون بشكل إيجابي وكبير مع الرئيس الحريري

ـ العاصفة التي مرّ بها لبنان خلال السنوات الأربع الفائتة بدأت بالإنحسار وأصبح الوضع الداخلي أكثر هدوءا 

رأى عضو  تكتل "التغيير والإصلاح" النائب د. فريد الخازن أنه وللمرة الأولى تتشكل في لبنان حكومة تشارك فيها جميع الاطراف السياسية، مقارنة مع الحكومات السابقة لها، بدءا من الحكومات التي تعاقبت على الحكم خلال سنوات الوصاية والتي لم تكن تملك القرار اللبناني، مرورا بحكومة الرئيس السنيورة الأولى في العام 2005 حيث أُقصيَ عن المشاركة بها فريق سياسي كبير يمثل شريحة واسعة من اللبنانيين، وصولا الى حكومة الرئيس السنيورة السابقة التي تألفت نتيجة لإتفاق الدوحة على أثر أزمة سياسية وشعبية حادة .

ولفت النائب الخازن في تصريح "للأنباء" الى  أن الحكومة الحالية برئاسة سعد  الحريري، تشكل مرحلة إنتقالية حقيقية تتيح أمام اللبنانيين فرصة العودة الى  المشروع الوطني الاساسي، والمتمثل بإعادة بناء الدولة على أسس مختلفة عما كانت عليه في السابق، وأهمها الإصلاحات الإدارية والسياسية، مشيرا الى أن حكومة الرئيس الحريري قد تستطيع ملامسة المسار المذكور فيما لو أراد اللبنانيون السير به حتى تحقيق الأهداف المرجوة منه .

وردا على  سؤال أعرب النائب الخازن عن إعتقاده  بأنه لا بد من أن يكون هناك إنسجام بين  الوزراء داخل الحكومة، مؤكدا أنه فيما خص تكتل "التغيير والإصلاح" فإن هذا الأخير قد تجاوز كل الخلافات الماضية وستكون لديه النية الحسنة والإرادة الكاملة للتعاون بشكل إيجابي وكبير مع الرئيس الحريري للسير معه يدا بيد في معالجة العناوين السياسية الشائكة والملفات المأزومة والمعلقة والمطلوب فيها الإصلاح الحقيقي بشكل جذري وحاسم

 

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Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri in ppictures new government
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  • Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, left, reviews an honor guard during a ceremony held on his first day at the Government House in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009. The formation of the 30-member Cabinet,  (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

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  • An employee hands a bouquet to Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri at a ceremony held on his first day at the Government House in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009, two days after the formation of the new Cabinet. . (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) 

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Syria-Lebanon ties need driven leaders
Daily Star
 
On Thursday, the presidents of Lebanon and Syria sat down for a quick mini-summit to evaluate bilateral relations in the recent past and coordinate for the future. With all due respect to the importance of this meeting, many are closely monitoring the likelihood of another such Lebanese-Syrian high-level political event, namely a visit by Prime Minister Saad Hariri to Damascus. 

 

President Michel Sleiman can certainly be credited with moving the relationship with Lebanon’s neighbor to a place where such a visit is even conceivable. But all eyes are now on Hariri, who in the past has expressed his belief that the Syrian regime was involved in the assassination of his father. All eyes are also on Syrian President Bashar Assad, who has heard repeated accusations to this effect. 

 

Despite all of this, it’s now inevitable for such a visit to take place. Hariri is someone who follows the guidelines that his father set down: Lebanon is bigger than any one of its citizens, who include the person who said this, as well as his son. 
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Lebanon’s struggle to move forward

After months of negotiations, Lebanon has a new unity government comprising several factions but, as Natalya Antelava reports, many people there now view any government as largely irrelevant.

The noise was becoming unbearable. From all sides, dozens of drivers blared their horns, waved their fists and shouted at the person in front of them.

"It’s all his fault," my taxi driver spat out, pointing straight ahead. I ducked out to look.

There, in the middle of the sea of honking cars, stood a thin young man in an oversized policeman’s uniform.

Helplessly he waved his skinny arms trying to steer angry drivers. The problem was that he was steering them in all directions at the same time.

"He is the one who created the jam, he should just mind his own business," my taxi driver said. The fact that traffic was the policeman’s business did not seem to cross his mind.

Ask anyone in Beirut and they will tell you that, if there is a really bad traffic jam, chances are there is a policeman behind it. It is not always true, of course, but it is certainly indicative of how Lebanese people approach authority.

"The best thing that the government can do is stay out of my life," a friend recently told me.

Political paralysis

The attitude is not surprising. For decades, Lebanon’s politicians have done nothing but drive the country into deadlock.

 

New Lebanese government meeting

The new government’s first meeting was on 10 November 2009

The country’s current crisis is just the latest episode of its chronic political paralysis.

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Lebanon finally forms government

Lebanon finally forms government  

Intensive Lebanese efforts give birth to triumphant national-unity Cabinet
Mr Hariri’s bloc won the election but had to form a unity government Lebanese President Michel Suleiman has announced the formation of the 30-member national-unity cabinet – five months after a general election. Five ministers were chosen by President Suleiman, and 15 are from PM-designate Saad Hariri’s Western-backed coalition.

The remaining 10 are from the opposition, including two members of Hezbollah, which struck a deal with the governing coalition last week.  The deadlock over the new government had threatened Lebanon’s stability.  Mr Hariri’s coalition won a narrow majority in June’s election, but needed to negotiate with the opposition to form a unity government.  "Finally, a government of national unity is born," Mr Hariri said.  "I want to be honest from the start: this government can be a chance to renew faith in the state and its institutions… or it can turn into a replay of our failures."  ‘Real partnership’Hezbollah representative Mohammed Fneish told the Associated Press news agency: "This formula achieves the principle of real partnership in political decision-making on key decisions."

One of the major reasons behind the delay was a series of extensive deliberations by Hariri with Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) leader Michel Aoun, who insisted that his Reform and Change bloc be granted a basket of key portfolios.

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