Hariri to return to Lebanon ‘in next two days’

Lebanese PM expected to formally resign on his return, but may be asked to serve again

Saad Hariri will return to Lebanon from Saudi Arabia within two days, he said on Tuesday, 10 days after his shock resignation as prime minister in a broadcast from Riyadh.

His abrupt resignation on November 4th sent Lebanon spinning into political crisis and back onto the front line of the Middle East power struggle between Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran.

Iran's ally Hizbullah holds major sway in Lebanese politics. It has long been a foe of Mr Hariri but is part of the coalition government he formed last year and called for his return.

In his resignation he made bitter attacks on both Iran and Hizbullah, and top Lebanese officials and politicians close to Mr Hariri have said Saudi Arabia coerced him to resign, dictated his statement and have held him under house arrest.

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Riyadh and Mr Hariri have both denied that. Mr Hariri is a political ally of Riyadh and holds Saudi nationality. He cited a fear of assassination and Hizbullah’s “sowing strife” in the Arab world as his reasons for stepping down.

Riyadh and Mr Hariri both oppose Hizbullah's military role in Syria, fighting alongside President Bashar al-Assad, and what they allege is its participation in Yemen's civil war alongside the Houthi group against a Saudi-led coalition.

Hizbullah denies having a role in the Yemen conflict.

Lebanese president Michel Aoun has said he will not accept Mr Hariri's resignation until he returns to Beirut to formally submit it. Analysts say when Mr Hariri does so, members of parliament will nominate him to serve as prime minister once again, and Aoun will ask him to form a new government.

That would open the door to a long period of political talks like those which preceded the formation of the national unity government that made |Mr Hariri prime minister a year ago.

Regional conflicts

Mr Hariri is expected to call on Mr Aoun to convene political dialogue on key issues facing Lebanon, chiefly on reaffirming the tiny country’s policy of staying out of regional conflicts and Hizbullah’s role in conflicts outside Lebanon’s borders, senior political sources say.

Any attempt to keep Hizbullah out of the government, in line with Saudi wishes, will torpedo the talks, political sources say. Riyadh regards Hizbullah as a terrorist group.

Hariri warned on Sunday in his first interview since resigning of possible Gulf Arab sanctions against Lebanon and of the risk to the livelihoods of the 300,000-400,000 Lebanese in the Gulf.

Lebanese foreign minister Gebran Bassil said in Paris on Tuesday that any punitive sanctions by Saudi Arabia on Lebanon would impact the region and Syrian refugees in the country.

Mr Bassil is a member of Mr Aoun’s political party. He said Mr Hariri needed to return to Lebanon to prove he was free.

After Mr Hariri’s resignation, Saudi Arabia accused the Lebanese government of declaring war on it because of Hizbullah’s pivotal role in Lebanese politics.

However, Riyadh’s Western allies have struck a tone different from that of Saudi Arabia, appearing to throw their weight behind both Mr Hariri and the Lebanese state, whose army is a major recipient of US aid.

The European Union foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, said on Tuesday after a meeting with Bassil that she expected Hariri and his family to return to Lebanon in the coming days.

On Twitter, Mr Hariri said he was well but that his family was staying in Saudi Arabia.

Western pressure

Sources across Lebanon’s political divide have said Mr Hariri struck a more compromising tone in his interview than in his resignation statement, at one point holding out the possibility of rescinding his decision to quit.

They say this represents a retreat by Saudi Arabia, attributing it to Western pressure.

The Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rai, head of Lebanon's biggest Christian community, met Hariri and Saudi king Salman and crown prince Mohammed in Riyadh on Tuesday.

Saudi al-Arabiya television quoted him as saying he supported the reasons for Mr Hariri’s resignation. His comments reflect the views of some politicians in Lebanon’s divided Maronite community but not Mr Aoun.

Echoing Saudi demands, MPs from Hariri's Future Movement called for a UN resolution from 2006 that demanded all militias in Lebanon disarm to be respected.

Hizbullah is the only Lebanese group with a militia, and says it needs weapons to secure Lebanon from Israel.

Hizbullah’s Lebanese opponents have long demanded it disarm.

Lebanese politicians have previously held talks on Hizbullah’s arsenal as part of a dialogue on a national defence strategy, but have never seriously discussed disarming it. – Reuters