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Buffeted by crises, Lebanon PM urges minister to do right thing

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati speaks at the government palace in Beirut
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati speaks at the government palace in Beirut, Lebanon November 4, 2021. Dalati Nohra/Handout via REUTERS

November 4, 2021

BEIRUT (Reuters) -Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Thursday urged a cabinet minister who triggered a rift with Saudi Arabia to put national interests first but stopped short of asking him to resign, as he struggles for a way out of the diplomatic crisis.

The rift ignited by Information Minister George Kordahi’s remarks criticising Saudi Arabia over the Yemen war has added to the problems facing Mikati and his government, which was already paralysed by a row over the probe into last year’s Beirut port explosion.

Barely two months since the government was agreed following a year of political conflict, the tensions have complicated Mikati’s attempts to begin addressing Lebanon’s most pressing problem – its catastrophic financial meltdown.

In a speech, Mikati said there would be “decisive meetings” ahead to resolve issues facing the government.

But he gave no indication that solutions were in sight.

Saudi Arabia and two other Gulf states expelled the Lebanese envoys in their capitals in response to Kordahi’s comments, which were recorded before he took office but aired last week. The United Arab Emirates withdrew its diplomatic staff from Beirut.

France, which has led international efforts to salvage Lebanon from myriad problems, said it was of crucial importance the country was left out of broader regional crises.

Kordahi has refused to quit over the comments, in which he said Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis were defending themselves and Yemen was being subjected to foreign aggression.

Saudi Arabia’s ties with Lebanon have been strained for years by the growing role of the Iran-backed Shi’ite group Hezbollah, and Riyadh has said Kordahi’s comments were a symptom of its dominance.

Mikati said the comments had presented the government with a difficult challenge and urged Kordahi to “prioritise national interest”.

“I repeat calls for the information minister to listen to his conscience and take circumstances into consideration and take the stance he should take,” Mikati said.

Speaking to al-Mayadeen, a pro-Iran broadcaster, Kordahi again said he would not quit.

Hezbollah has expressed support for Kordahi. Its MPs said the Saudi reaction was unjustified and amounted “to waging war”.

Kordahi has said his remarks were personal views made before he was a minister, and that he is committed to government policy. Mikati has said the remarks had nothing to do with his government, which wants good ties with Arab states.

The government has not met since Oct. 12 because of a drawn-out row over the probe into the Beirut port explosion. Hezbollah is also at the heart of that row, demanding the removal of the lead investigator, whom it accuses of bias.

Indicating no resolution to that standoff, Mikati said cabinet would not intervene in judicial matters.

In an apparent swipe at Hezbollah, he said: “Anyone who thinks they can impose their opinion by impeding work and verbal escalation is wrong”, adding that cabinet was not the place for dictates and threats.

(Reporting by Yasmin Hussein and Timour Azhari; Writing by Maha El Dahan and Tom Perry; Editing by Alison Williams, Giles Elgood and Hugh Lawson)

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