Al-Rahi Blames Political Rivals for Dividing Country

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460
  • W460

Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi lashed out at politicians on Sunday, stressing that the Lebanese are suffering due to the vacuum at the Baabda Palace and the sharp rift between the political arch-foes.

“The acute dispute between the rival parties divided the country into two and obstructed the civil society,” al-Rahi said during his Easter sermon at Bkirki.

He pointed out that “one-third of the Lebanese became under the line of poverty, which is equal to the number of Syria refugees in Lebanon who need urgent aid.”

“We are facing enormous economic and social challenges,” al-Rahi said.

An estimated 1.18 million Syrians have fled their country's bloody conflict to take refuge in Lebanon, which has struggled to deal with the influx as the war enters its fifth year.

Al-Rahi called on World and Arab leaders to stop supporting mercenaries and fighters with money and weapons, urging them to find peaceful solutions to end the conflicts in the region.

Former President Michel Suleiman, Kataeb Party chief Amin Gemayel, Information Minister Ramzi Jreij, Labor Minister Sejaan Qazzi and several other political figures attended the mass.

On Saturday, al-Rahi denounced during his Easter message the ongoing vacuum in the presidency, urging political powers to hold the polls and end their boycott of the electoral sessions.

“There are no constitutional justifications for the boycott of the elections,” he said, noting that the vacuum has created a “political death” in Lebanon and crippled the government and the parliament.

“It is as if all sides are unfortunately waiting for the order by foreign powers to stage the polls,” he lamented.

Suleiman's term ended in May without the election of a successor as the ongoing disputes between the rival March 8 and 14 camps have thwarted the polls.

Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun's Change and Reform and Hizbullah's Loyalty to the Resistance blocs have been boycotting the elections, demanding that political powers agree on a compromise presidential candidate.

Only few MPs have been attending the sessions. The next electoral session is scheduled for April 22.

Comments 5
Thumb marcus 05 April 2015, 11:00

Your Eminence either you believe Lebanon is a democracy or not. It is natural to have differences and deep differences in any country. What is not natural is one political party (minority) is armed to the teeth and imposes its will on the rest of the Lebanese through arms and their intimidating effects. Call a spade a spade and enough with generalities. Yesterday, you claimed ALL political parties are waiting for orders from outside to elect a President. Do you believe those parties that attend every electoral session are waiting for orders from outside. if so how?
Batrak Sfeir is sorely missed!!!

Missing humble 05 April 2015, 11:45

Excellent thinking and reasoning.

Thumb -phoenix1 05 April 2015, 18:13

You're absolutely right Your Eminence, but in all frankness, I also blame you for flip-flopping and this for too long now, either you take decisive stands or accept facts that you're not filling your post properly.

Thumb -phoenix1 06 April 2015, 03:18

PLO ya habileh, and your dna has proven that you were once a cat without a tail. Walaw, you're so predictable, even without dna, ahh ya habileh enta. Get a life ya kangaroo.

Thumb -phoenix1 06 April 2015, 03:34

rebel-habileh, 2 acronyms in one thread? get a life, you're sounding cheaper by the minute.