Report: National Struggle Front to Back Hariri's Pick for Premiership

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The opposition al-Mustaqbal bloc and the centrist National Struggle Front have agreed to throw their weight behind the person that ex-Premier Saad Hariri will name to lead the new government, a report said Tuesday.

Caretaker Minister Wael Abu Faour, who is close to National Struggle Front chief MP Walid Jumblat, held talks with Hariri in Riyadh and returned to Beirut late Monday.

As Safir newspaper said that the talks culminated in a deal for Jumblat's bloc to name the same person that Hariri, who is the head of al-Mustaqbal movement, will back for the premiership on condition that he be a non-provocative man and acceptable by all sides.

Al-Mustaqbal bloc leader Fouad Saniora was also among Hariri's major visitors over the weekend.

Al-Mustaqbal MP Nuhad al-Mashnouq told An Nahar daily that the talks in Riyadh focused on the party's call for a neutral technocrat cabinet hat would oversee the parliamentary elections.

Any discussion about a non-technocrat government is out of the question, he said.

The MP also ruled out bringing back caretaker Prime Minister Najib Miqati to power to head a neutral technocrat government.

“The man has said that he was a candidate for the elections and a neutral technocrat government requires a prime minister who hasn't announced his candidacy,” al-Mashnouq told An Nahar.

The lawmaker shrugged off a scenario similar to 2011 when Jumblat's 12-member bloc along with the March 8 majority led by Hizbullah brought Miqati to the premiership.

Hariri headed a cabinet in 2009, until its collapse in 2011 after March 8 alliance ministers withdrew from his national unity government.

Al-Mashnouq denied that al-Mustaqbal and the National Struggle Front had struck a deal during Abu Faour's visit to Riyadh.

“The results of the visit of the Front's delegation haven't appeared yet,” he said. “We haven't yet discussed names because we are waiting for an agreement on the type of the government.”

Miqati resigned last month over differences between cabinet members on the formation of the authority that would oversee the elections and the extension of the tenure of Internal Security Forces chief Maj. Gen. Ashraf Rifi, who handed over his post to Brig. Gen. Roger Salem after reaching the age of retirement.

Although the March 14 opposition's most factions have ruled out naming Miqati to head a technocrat cabinet, the March 8 majority led by Hizbullah hasn't yet settled on the person that it sees fit for the job.

Reports have said that Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun, who is a major member of the March 8 alliance, is refusing to name Miqati.

Comments 6
Default-user-icon Roy (Guest) 11 years

I doubt ex-Premier Rafik Hariri could name anybody... Do you read your articles before publishing them?

Thumb geha 11 years

a step in the right direction: sunnis should be allowed to select their prime minister as other sects select their top representatives.

Thumb jumblatdedon 11 years

No they should not, only Christians should be allowed according to hezbmajos, while the shia continue to step on the necks of the sunni & druze.

Missing abraham 11 years

then why don't you agree that a new election law backed by the christians should allow every sect should elect their own MP's

Thumb jumblatdedon 11 years

Yeah good one Farsi idiot, but i suppose it is totally acceptable for Lebanon to be at the beckoning call of some shia fanciful religious text from 900 years ago & allow Khamanie to have his way with Lebanon,nice try farsi troll

Missing allouchi 11 years

Unfortunately we don't live in a secular state and because of that the Sunnis will have the most to say in choosing the PM and since Sheikh Saad represents a vast majority of the Sunnis he should have the major say...and for all those that blame him for being overseas, get it in your think sculls that wasn't by his own choosing, he's targeted for assassination by Bachar and his Lebanese cronies...