Welcome
English
Print Story Send Story by Mail Send Story by SMS
Lebanon
Saniora Vows Not to Succumb to Intimidation
Prime Minister Fouad Saniora vowed Sunday not to succumb to intimidation or extortion and said "turning the country into a militia is not acceptable."
"All domestic issues can be solved through dialogue. Arms and intimidation cannot solve anything," Saniora said during a celebration in his honor in the southern port city of Sidon.

"We have never succumbed to intimidation or extortion and we will not succumb now," Saniora vowed. "We will not back down from our goals."

"Turning the country into a farmhouse or a militia is not acceptable," Saniora stressed, adding that this will be tantamount to "squandering the blood of our martyrs."

Saniora said he has no reservations to "brotherly" ties with Syria, adding that "we hope we would be able to discuss issues like border demarcation, arms smuggling and missing Lebanese as the need arises."

On the war of words between him and Speaker Nabih Berri, Saniora acknowledged that the political conflict has "entered a new phase" and pledged not to tire out despite the obstacles.

Turning to the issue of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, Saniora said: "We were able to survive wars … By this, we will have achieved a first step toward bringing back freedom of speech to the Lebanese."

Saniora stressed the need for a "new Arab political speech to unite our ranks and set priorities and rid sectarian bias and the logic of intimidation."
 

Beirut, 22 Feb 09, 14:30
 
Your Comments
Other Headlines
Other Categories
Editorials
SpecialReports
Middle East
The World
Interview
Away From Politics
Lebanon Business
World Business
Culture
Lebanon Sports
World Sports
Technology
Health
Fringe
 
 Advertisement


 
Comments
Please wait while we load the comments
Click to Comment

Click to Comment  
Recommend Readers' Comments to Promote Their Views  


contact us | live support | advertisers | link to us | membership agreement | privacy policy
An-Nahar

© 2010 Naharnet. All rights reserved.