French President Emmanuel Macron
has said he will welcome Lebanese
leader Saad Hariri "with the honours
that are due a prime minister", adding
that he expected him to return to
Lebanon within days or weeks.
Hariri and his family are expected to
meet Macron on Saturday in France's
capital, Paris, following an invitation by
the French president earlier this week.
Hariri, a Sunni Muslim politician and
longtime ally of Saudi Arabia, suddenly
announced his resignation as Lebanon's
prime minister during a visit to Riyadh
on November 4.
He has been promising to return home
soon but Saudi leaders say they fear for
his safety if he does.
Advertisement
Lebanese officials have refused to
accept Hariri's resignation, unless he
delivers it on Lebanese soil, and have
alleged that he is being held hostage by
authorities in Saudi Arabia.
"I will ...
welcome Prime
Minister Hariri
with the honours
that are due to a
prime minister,
indeed resigned,
but whose
resignation
hasn't yet been recognised in his
country, as he hasn't been there,"
Macron said at a conference in
Gothenburg, Sweden, on Friday.
"So nevertheless I'll welcome him as
prime minister," he added.
"Prime Minister Hariri then has the
intention, I believe, to return to his
country in the following days or weeks.
It's for him to discuss his own future
but I don't have any doubts about this
subject."
'Rumours'
Macron's invitation to Hariri on
Wednesday came just hours after
Lebanon's President Michel Aoun said
that nothing justified the "detention of
Hariri" in Saudi Arabia, denouncing it
as a Saudi act of aggression.
On Thursday, Aoun welcomed the news
of Hariri's trip to the French capital
"We hope that the crisis is over and
Hariri's acceptance of the invitation to
go to France is the start of a solution,"
he wrote on the official presidential
Twitter account.
"If Mr. Hariri speaks from France, I
would consider that he speaks freely,
but his resignation must be presented
in Lebanon, and he will have to remain
there until the formation of the new
government," Aoun said later in a
statement issued by his office.
There is no confirmation what Hariri
will do after visiting Paris, but Okab
Sakr, a Lebanese politician from
Hariri's Future Movement political
party, said on Wednesday that the
Lebanese leader would likely visit other
countries before heading to Beirut.
"It is very likely
he will be doing
a tour of some
European and
Arab countries
to explain
Lebanon's
position on the
current crisis before he returns [to
Lebanon]," he said.
On Friday, Hariri once again dismissed
the reports about his alleged detention
in Saudi Arabia as "rumours."
He said in a post on Twitter that he has
stayed in Saudi Arabia to consult about
the future of Lebanon and its relations
with the region.
Tensions with Iran
In his televised resignation speech,
Hariri blamed interference in Lebanon
by Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah
for his decision, adding that he feared
an assassination attempt.
Under a political deal reached last year,
a coalition government was formed in
Lebanon, with Hariri as prime minister
and Aoun as president.
Hezbollah, a popular Shia group which
is represented in the Lebanese
parliament and has a strong armed
wing, also joined the 30-member unity
government.
Saudi Arabia and its Arab Gulf allies
view Hezbollah as a "terrorist
organisation" because of its role in
Arab countries ranging from Syria to
Yemen.
On Friday, Lebanon's Foreign Minister
Gebran Bassil during a visit to Russia
criticised groups for attempting to
"dislodge the Lebanese head of state",
without naming them.
But Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir said from Spain that
"unless Hezbollah disarms and becomes
a political party, Lebanon will be held
hostage by Hezbollah and by extension
Iran".
Meanwhile, in the United States, Qatari
Foreign Minister Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al Thani compared
events in Lebanon to a blockade
imposed on his country by a Saudi-led
group of countries.
"Exactly what happened to Qatar six
months ago is happening now to
Lebanon," he told reporters in
Washington, DC.
On June 5, Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt
announced they had cut ties with Qatar,
accusing it of supporting "terrorism"
and fostering close relations with Iran.
Qatar strongly denied the allegations.
Why are British Muslim marriages unprotected by law? FEATURE / ISLAM MUSLIM MARRIAGE IN THE UK 60 percent Muslim marriages religious-only, unregistered 28 percent do not realise Islamic ceremony not legally recognised 66 percent know union has no legal status 50 percent do not intend to have marriage legalised - Source: Channel 4 survey Aina Khan Aina Khan is a journalist focusing on race, faith and identity. She's reading a masters in religion in politics at SOAS. @ ainajkhan United Kingdom Islam Europe, Maureen, right, was not entitled to financial support after her husband Rashid - the father of her child - passed away [Courtesy: Maureen] London, England - When Maureen wed her husband Rashid in a Muslim ceremony in 1973 in Bradford, she knew that should the relationship fall apart, she would not be entitled to share his assets. Her marriage was sanctified in the eyes of God, but in the eyes of the state it was "unregistered", not legal, and so financial protection...
Comments