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News ID: 72872
Publish Date : 18 November 2019 - 21:54

Parliament Speaker Warns: Lebanon Sinking Ship



BEIRUT (Dispatches) – Lebanon is like a sinking ship that will go under unless action is taken, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri is quoted as saying, referring to the country’s deep economic and political crisis.
Berri told visitors that efforts to form a new government were "completely frozen” and awaiting developments at any moment, the newspaper al-Joumhuria reported.
Struggling with a massive public debt and economic stagnation, Lebanon has sunk into major political trouble since protests erupted against its ruling elite a month ago, leading Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri to quit on Oct. 29.
Banks, which have mostly been closed since the protests began, announced temporary measures including a weekly cap of $1,000 on cash withdrawals and restricting transfers abroad to cover urgent personal spending only.
A bank staff union will decide whether to lift a strike that has kept the banks shut for the past week.
Efforts to form a new government, needed to enact urgent reforms, hit a setback at the weekend when former finance minister Mohammad Safadi withdrew his candidacy for the post of prime minister, sparking bitter recriminations.
Hezbollah said "political understandings” would take place between "the parties and even with leaders of the protest movement” to form a new government, without giving further details.
Hezbollah deputy leader Sheikh Naim Kassem, in an interview broadcast by the group’s television station al-Manar, said the new government’s agenda would help calm down the streets.
Both Hezbollah and Berri want Hariri, who is aligned with Persian Gulf Arab and Western states, to be prime minister again.  
Berri said he still hoped Hariri would agree to form the new cabinet, al-Joumhuria reported.
"The country is like a ship that is sinking little by little,” the paper quoted him as saying. "If we don’t take the necessary steps, it will sink entirely.”
An-Nahar newspaper quoted Berri as likening the situation of the Lebanese people to that of passengers on the Titanic, the passenger liner that sank in 1912 after hitting an iceberg.
Some protesters had rejected the potential nomination of Safadi, a prominent businessman and former lawmaker from the predominantly Sunni city of Tripoli, saying he is part of a political elite they want ousted.
Lebanon’s prime minister must be a Sunni Muslim, according to its sectarian power-sharing system.

Lebanese protesters gather next to burning tires to block the southern entrance of Tripoli, in northern Lebanon, on November 12, 2019, as anti-government demonstrations continue across the country.