Off the wire
China's draft cybersecurity law gets 3rd reading  • Indian capital chokes after overnight Diwali fireworks  • 1st LD: Volcano erupts in western Indonesia  • Confidante of S.Korean president summoned on alleged intervention in state affairs  • Dutch king, queen start 4-day visit to Australia  • Foreign visitors to Japan already at 20 million, surpasses 2015 full year record  • Urgent: Iraqi forces begin operation to enter eastern Mosul  • 1st LD: China mulls amending surveying, mapping law  • Durant's 37 points leads Warriors past Suns 106-100  • Roundup: Japan's industrial production stalls in Sept. in further sign of economic malaise  
You are here:   Home

Lebanon to elect president after 2.5-year vacancy

Xinhua, October 31, 2016 Adjust font size:

Lebanon's parliament is set to end more than two years and five months of stalemate on Monday by electing Michel Aoun, head of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), as president.

Aoun, a Christian former army chief, is allied with the Iran-backed Hezbollah party whose forces are fighting in Syria alongside forces of the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

The expected election of Aoun as president came after the surprise endorsement of his candidacy by Saad Hariri, a former prime minister now heading al-Mustaqbal Movement.

A fierce opponent of the Assad government in Syria, Hariri is the leader of a bloc that rivals Hezbollah and enjoys the support of Saudi Arabia.

Aoun is expected to nominate Hariri to return as prime minister, but with little consensus in the political landscape, the process of forming a government is likely to be long and arduous.

Lebanon has been without a president since May 2014, when former President Michel Suleiman's six-year term expired.

Since then, parliament has held 45 failed sessions to elect a successor, each time failing to make quorum.

According to the constitution, the president should be elected with two thirds of votes in the 128-seat parliament in the first round, and with a simple majority in the following rounds.

The power sharing pact stipulates that the president should be a Christian Maronite, the speaker a Muslim Shiite and the premier a Muslim Sunni. Endit