Lebanon’s leading politician, Saad al-Hariri, re-emerged as a candidate for prime minister yesterday when businessman Samir Khatib withdrew his candidacy to lead a government that must tackle an acute economic crisis.
President Michel Aoun responded by postponing until Dec 16 consultations with lawmakers that had been expected to result in Khatib being named prime minister today.
The delay was requested by most parties in parliament, the presidency said. Hariri quit as prime minister on Oct 29, prompted by mass protests against an entire political class blamed for state corruption and steering Lebanon into the worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.
Under the country’s power sharing system, the prime minister must be a Sunni.
Hariri has continued to govern in a caretaker capacity until a new prime minister is named.
After Hariri quit, talks to agree a new cabinet became mired in divisions between Hariri, who is aligned with Western and Arab states, and adversaries including the Hezbollah.
Last month Hariri officially withdrew his candidacy to be prime minister. A consensus on Khatib appeared to form last week among the main parties, including Hariri.
But Khatib failed to win enough backing from the establishment for the position.
Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Latif Derian, Lebanon’s most senior cleric, told Khatib during a meeting yesterday that he backed Hariri, Khatib said after the meeting.
Khatib later went to see Hariri at his Beirut residence where he announced the withdrawal of his candidacy.
There was no immediate statement from Hariri.
In recent days, in his role as caretaker prime minister, Hariri appealed to friendly foreign states to help Lebanon secure credit lines for essential imports as the country grapples with a hard currency shortage.
He has said he would return as prime minister only if he could lead a government of specialist ministers which he believes would satisfy protesters and be best placed to deal with the economic crisis and attract foreign aid. But this demand has been rejected by groups including Hezbollah and its ally Aoun.
Both say the government must include politicians.