Pierre A. Maroun
Secretary General
ALCC
Senior Policy Advisor
ALC
Joseph Hage
President
ALCC
President
ALC
Mr. Adib Farha
Senior Policy Advisor
ALC
Exe. VP of
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FEATURED EDITORIALS
Hizbullah Arms Dominate First Round of Lebanese Dialogue

Bickering Lebanese politicians postponed the thorny issue of Hizbullah's weapons on
Saturday at talks in Qatar aimed at ending a feud that drove their country to the brink of a new
civil war.
Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabr al-Thani "offered to come up with a
proposal on the Hizbullah weaponry issue and present it to the two parties," a Lebanese
delegate told AFP.

"The two sides have agreed to that," he added following the first session of Arab-mediated
talks by 14 leaders or representatives of the government and the Hizbullah-led opposition,
backed by Syria and Iran.

Host Qatar offered to come up with a compromise after leaders of the March 14
parliamentary bloc insisted on listing Hizbullah's arms on the agenda of the dialogue, said
the delegate, requesting anonymity.

After 65 people were killed in nearly a week of fighting, the two sides agreed on Thursday to a
national dialogue aimed at breaking an impasse over electing a new president and forming
a unity government.

The Qatari hosts will be working against the backdrop of two United Nations Security Council
resolutions calling for the disarmament of all militias in Lebanon.

Hizbullah was the only group that did not have to hand over its guns to the government
following the 1989 Saudi-brokered Taef agreement to end the 1975-1990 civil war, because it
was fighting the Israeli occupation of south Lebanon.

However, Israel pulled its troops out of Lebanon in 2000.

Resolution 1559, adopted in 2004 called, among other things, for the "disbanding and
disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias."

Resolution 1701, which brought an end to the 2006 war between Israel and Hizbullah, called
for there to be "no weapons or authority in Lebanon other than that of the Lebanese state."

Despite disagreement over the arms question, the delegates did agree to form a committee
of three members from each side to address the issue of a new electoral law for
parliamentary polls due next year, the delegate said.

No time has been fixed for the next session, said a source in the Arab League, which is
sponsoring the crisis talks, but bilateral meetings were expected to be held on the sidelines
of the gathering.

In addition to the electoral law, the leaders are expected to discuss a proposed unity
government.

Parliament has failed to convene to elect a successor, exacerbating a crisis that began in
late 2006 when six pro-Syrian ministers quit the cabinet of Prime Minister Fouad Saniora.

On June 10, it is due for the 20th time to meet to elect a president.

The talks officially started on Friday evening with a brief opening session chaired by Qatar's
emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani.

Mediation continued overnight with the emir shuttling between rival parties, according to the
Lebanese pro-government newspaper An-Nahar.

Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah is not attending, reportedly because of security concerns,
and is represented by Hizbullah MP Mohammed Raad.

Also attending on behalf of the opposition are parliament speaker Nabih Berri and Christian
leader Michel Aoun.

The dialogue is linked to a six-point plan agreed following Arab League mediation led by the
Qatari premier.

Under the deal the rivals undertook "to shore up the authority of the Lebanese state
throughout the country," to refrain from using weapons to further political aims and to remove
militants from the streets.(AFP-Naharnet)
Hezbollah's Private Phone Network
Hezbollah's Recent Terrorist
Attacks on Lebanese People in
Beirut and Mount Lebanon.
Source: NowLebanon.com
 
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