Beirut/Doha - Samir Geagea, Christian leader of the Lebanese
Forces and a member of the ruling majority, called Monday for an Arab
peacekeeping force in Lebanon if the Doha dialogue talks fail to end
the Lebanese political crisis.
'My proposal is an Arab peacekeeping force, and I have discussed
it with all the mediators and with the Arab ministerial Committee if
the dialogue fails,' Geagea said. 'There is a tense calm in Lebanon
today, and if we want a real stability then this is a real solution.'
Geagea criticized the response by the Hezbollah-led opposition to
the Qatar proposals and said: 'The dialogue received a big blow
because of the statement released by the opposition.
'We don't know if we will be able to repair the damage caused by
their statement,' he said.
'Lebanon's security is an essential issue for us' following the
sectarian fighting that broke out in and around Beirut on May 7,
Geagea said.
Lebanese rival leaders left Lebanon last Friday for talks in Doha
in a bid to end the political crisis in the country and which has
turned violent, after street clashes last week between the majority
and the opposition led to the killing of 82 people.
Lebanon's Hezbollah-led opposition on Monday rejected a proposal
at Arab-mediated talks with pro-government rivals aimed at breaking a
political deadlock which took the country to the brink of civil war.
The differences among the Lebanese rivals is threatening to derail
the crisis talks on their fourth of day, and came after host Qatar
proposed an immediate presidential vote and formation of a unity
government while postponing discussion of a disputed electoral law.
In a statement issued after a meeting of its leaders, the Syria-
and Iran-backed opposition refused to postpone discussion of the
electoral law and said it was committed to the Arab-brokered
agreement reached last week in Beirut, which led to the Doha talks.
'The Lebanese opposition stresses its adherence to... (firstly)
agreeing on the representation (of parties) in the formation of a
national unity government, and (secondly) to agree on a new electoral
law,' the statement said.
'The agreement would be crowned by electing General Michel
Suleiman as president as agreed,' it added.
The rival factions have agreed on the election of the army chief
as president to succeed pro-Syrian president Emile Lahoud, whose term
ended in November 2007.
But differences over the government's makeup and the electoral law
have blocked his election, worsening a crisis that began in November
2006 when six pro-Syrian ministers quit the cabinet of the Western-
backed Prime Minister Fouad Seniora.
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