Who is the lebanese president




















He went on to say: "I promise the Lebanese people that we will work with a national principle, and we are not with one group against another, and I will not miss an opportunity to knock on the doors of the Arab world. Mikati also pledged to hold the parliamentary elections as slated for May 8. Earlier on Friday, two sources close to the Lebanese presidency told Anadolu Agency that Mikati will present a proposal to form a new government to Aoun at the Baabda Presidential Palace in the capital Beirut at noon.

On July 26, Aoun assigned Mikati to form the government after Saad Hariri and Mustafa Adib apologized for not completing the task due to differences between the political forces. The Mikati government will succeed the caretaker government, which resigned six days after a catastrophic explosion hit the Port of Beirut on Aug. For more than a year, political differences have prevented the formation of a government that would put an end to the economic collapse and succeed the current caretaker government headed by Hassan Diab.

For nearly two years, Lebanon has been afflicted by the worst economic crisis in its history, which led to a financial collapse and a decline in foreign exchange, reflected in shortages of fuel, medicines, and other basic commodities.

Telecommunications Minister Johnny Qorm Tourism Minister Walid Nassar Information Minister George Kordahi Justice Minister Henry Khoury Energy Minister Walid Fayyad Defence Minister Maurice Slim Social Affairs Minister Hector Hajjar Youth and Sports Minister George Kalas Administrative Development Minister Najla Riashi only female minister Industry Minister George Bojkian. More from News. US: Blinken to make first official visit to sub-Saharan Africa. Belarusian airline stops flying Middle East citizens from Turkey.

Afghan mosque hit by blast during Friday prayers, 3 killed. He pledged to seek support from Arab countries, a number of which have shunned Lebanon because of the extensive influence wielded in Beirut by the heavily armed, Iran-backed Shi'ite Islamist group Hezbollah, which is allied to Aoun. Addressing the daily hardships, Mikati described how mothers had been forced to cut back on milk for their children.

Referring to medicine shortages, he said: "If a mother's eldest son leaves the country and she has tears in her eyes, she can't buy a Panadol pill. But Lebanon can no longer afford to subsidise goods such as imported fuel because the country does not have enough hard currency reserves, he said. Aoun said the government was the best that could be agreed and capable of action. Like the outgoing cabinet of Prime Minister Hassan Diab, the new one comprises ministers with technical expertise who are not prominent politicians but have been named by the main parties.

The Diab government failed to enact any of the major reforms sought by foreign donors, a task complicated by resistance from major players in Lebanon's sectarian and factional politics. Securing support from Arab states such as Saudi Arabia would depend on confronting Hezbollah's influence, while securing an IMF programme would require reforms that past governments have failed to enact. This is not going to be easy," he said.

Youssef Khalil, a senior central bank official and aide to governor Riad Salameh, was named finance minister.



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