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Date: Feb 28, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
March 14 shuns Mikati Cabinet, vows to confront 'coup'

By Hussein Dakroub
Monday, February 28, 2011


BEIRUT: The March 14 coalition announced Sunday it would boycott the government to be formed by Prime Minister-designate Najib Mikati and vowed to confront what it called the Hezbollah-orchestrated “coup” that led to the ouster of Saad Hariri.


In a strongly worded statement issued after a special meeting held at the Bristol Hotel and attended by caretaker Prime Minister Hariri, who is also an MP, and 54 of the coalition’s 60 lawmakers, the March 14 groups said they will move to “a peaceful opposition” to defend the Lebanese Republic and protect the Constitution.


Mikati refused to comment on the March 14 coalition’s statement. “Prime Minister [designate] Mikati said that each party has the right to express the views it wants,” a source close to Mikati told The Daily Star. But earlier Sunday, Mikati said he would consider other options with President Michel Sleiman if the March14 coalition decided not to participate in the government.


A source close the Cabinet formation process said the March 14 coalition’s statement would lead to “an intensification of contacts between Mikati and [March 8] parties in order to speed up the government’s formation.”
Meanwhile, Hariri will address the Lebanese at 6 p.m. Monday to talk about Hezbollah’s weapons, a major divisive issue between the March 8 and March 14 groups, a March 14 source said.


The statement, read out by former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, accused the Hezbollah-led March 8 alliance of staging a “coup” with the resignations of its ministers that led to the toppling of Hariri’s Cabinet on Jan. 12 and later to Mikati’s nomination to form a new government.


The March 14 coalition accused the March 8 groups of violating constitutional traditions and rules by putting conditions on the government’s formation. It also accused Mikati, who is backed by the March 8 alliance, of failing to respond positively to the coalition’s demands for making a public commitment not to end Lebanon’s cooperation with the U.N.-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL), which is probing the 2005 assassination of Hariri’s father, statesman Rafik Hariri.


“In light of these dangerous developments represented in the March 8 groups’ insistence on a coup against the institutions, and the prime minister-designate’s failure to adopt a clear stance on constitutional and procedural issues, the March 14 groups announce their rejection to participate in the proposed government because they refuse to legitimatize the mentioned coup and refuse to serve as a witness unable to stop deviations, excesses and violations,” the statement said.


“In their confirmation to confront and thwart the coup and amid the prime minister-designate’s inability to provide clear answers, the attending lawmakers have decided to refuse to participate in the next government and to launch a peaceful democratic opposition to defend the republic and protect the Constitution,” it added.


The statement said that instead of reacting positively to the March14 coalition’s demands, “the country has been witnessing practices by March 8 groups amounting to a continued violation of constitutional norms and rules and an imposition of conditions on the shape and policy of the government.”


It added that the March 8 groups’ actions also trespassed on the prerogatives of both the president and the prime minister-designate that threatened to plunge the country into “a constitutional and national crisis whose consequences the Lebanese cannot bear.”

 

The statement was clearly referring to Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun who is demanding a large Christian representation in the government, including the key Interior Ministry portfolio.


“While registering their condemnation and rejection of these ongoing practices, the March 14 groups would like to confirm that they consider what happened in the designation process and what is happening in the formation process is a coup against the Constitution and the democratic system carried out with the force of arms and its luster,” the statement said.


“Therefore, the March 14 groups cannot accept nor keep silent on what has happened and is happening. They will confront it with all available means in the framework of their commitment to all means of democratic practices. They hold all the parties concerned responsible for this coup and its consequences,” it added.


Referring to the circumstances that led to the toppling of Hariri’s Cabinet, the statement said: “The manner in which [Hariri’s] national unity government was toppled and the atmosphere of intimidation with the threat of arms used by the March 8 groups and the subsequent intimidation that accompanied the consultations [to name a new premier] and [Mikati’s] appointment, have confirmed doubts that the March 8 groups are bent on consolidating their coup and undermining all attempts to form a balanced government by putting conditions that cannot be fulfilled and that run contrary to constitutional principles and traditions and contradict with the March 14 groups’ principles.”
It said the March 14 groups’ principles were aimed at defending the Constitution and maintaining national unity and the parliamentary democratic system which protects the citizens’ freedoms and rights.


The March 14 groups are also demanding that “justice be served and putting an end to terrorist crimes that targeted distinguished leaders in the country by upholding the Special Tribunal for Lebanon and putting an end to non-state arms, which are spread in neighborhoods, towns and villages and which are threatening the citizens’ lives and the country’s security and stability,” the statement added.


Asked to comment on the March 14 camp’s decision to boycott his government, Mikati said in Tripoli earlier in the day: “My firm position is to call on all [parties] to participate in the government. This participation is not a personal issue as much as it is necessary to resurrect the country and its institutions and cooperate to solve the many problems we are suffering from.”


He added that one of the options he had in mind was to form a government comprising the March 8 and March 14 groups.“But if the March 14 team decided to boycott, I will discuss with the president the other options and choose what’s the best for the country’s interest,” Mikati said.


A senior March 8 source said the March14 coalition’s decision to become an opposition would undoubtedly facilitate the government’s formation. “The March 14 decision will help Mikati’s Cabinet formation efforts,” the source said.


 



 
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