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Snags hold up formation of gov’t

By Reuters - Dec 22,2018 - Last updated at Dec 22,2018

BEIRUT — Efforts to finalise a deal on a Lebanese national unity government hit new snags on Saturday, postponing its formation, a senior official closely involved in the efforts said.

More than seven months since its last general election, Lebanon, heavily indebted and suffering from low economic growth, is in dire need of an administration to enact long-stalled reforms and put public debt on a sustainable footing.

A deal on a new government led by Prime Minister-designate Saad Al Hariri looked close earlier this week when a mediation effort made headway towards resolving the last big problem, which surrounded Sunni Muslim representation.

Hariri, Lebanon’s leading Sunni politician, said on Friday he hoped to finalize the Cabinet later that day. The Cabinet seats must parceled out among rival groups according to a finely balanced sectarian system.

 “A number of obstacles have appeared in the last hours that led to delaying the government. The obstacles include the problem of Sunni representation and the problem of portfolio distribution,” the official said.

The official did not give an estimate as to when the problems would be resolved.

The dispute over Sunni representation emerged as a group of Sunni MPs allied to the Shiite group Hizbollah said they must be allocated a seat in Cabinet to reflect their election gains and Hariri resisted their demand.

Under the compromise solution, six pro-Hizbollah Sunnis agreed to be represented in Cabinet by another figure acceptable to them, with each of the six submitting a name from which President Michel Aoun would pick one.

But on Saturday, the pro-Hizbollah Sunni MPs withdrew their support for the Sunni candidate picked by Aoun — Jawad Adra — because he “did not consider himself an exclusive representative” of the six Sunni MPs.

The May 6 national election, produced a parliament tilted in favour of the heavily armed, Iran-backed Shiite Muslim group Hizbollah, which together with its political allies won more than 70 of the 128 seats.

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