The
Qornet Shehwan Gathering opposition group Tuesday
demanded the Cabinets resignation if it did
not relieve Interior Minister Elias Murr from office
after his performance in overseeing the controversial
parliamentary by-election in Metn.
The group was meeting for the first time since the
June 2 poll, which saw Gabriel Murr backed
by some Qornet Shehwan members win the seat.
Although Qornet Shehwan members backed different
candidates Gabriel Murr and Ghassan Mokheiber
the group said it was united after the victory,
which it said had helped boost the vitality of the
countrys political life.
The group also endorsed the oppositions alliance
with groups not represented in the gathering, a
reference to the Free Patriotic Movement of Michel
Aoun and followers of the disbanded Lebanese Forces.
The
positions of these forces and personalities had
a positive impact, and prevented the nature of the
election battle from being altered, as well as forcing
the recognition of the results as they appeared
in the ballot boxes, said a statement by the
group.
The gathering is also surprised by the attempts
to cast doubt on the power of the opposition and
split the Qornet Shehwan Gathering, which is proud
to have come out of this experience more united
and representative of the hopes and aspirations
of the Lebanese than ever before, it continued.
But the gathering saved its harshest words for the
interior minister, saying the Cabinet should remove
him from office to preserve the sanctity of
the law and state institutions.
If the Cabinet fails to hold accountable the
interior minister, it should resign, the group
said, accusing Murr and his father Metn MP Michel
Murr of using state bodies to pressure voters prior
to the elections.
It
also said they had pressured vote tabulation committees
to change the poll results, and rejected Myrna Murrs
withdrawal from the race a week after election day,
calling it yet another attempt to ignore the
actual election results.
Among those in attendance were MPs Butros Harb,
Nassib Lahoud, Fares Soueid, Nayla Mouawad, Mansour
Bone, Antonie Ghanem, and Salah Honein; National
Bloc leader Carlos Edde, Elias Abu Assi on behalf
of the National Liberal Party, An-Nahar general
manager Gebran Tueni, former Ambassador Simon Karam,
Samir Franjieh, former MP Nadim Salem, and university
professor Farid Khazen.
Earlier, Metn MP Nassib Lahoud reiterated his opposition
to the governments endorsement of Gabriel
Murrs victory only after Murrs niece
had withdrawn.
Speaking
to reporters following a visit to Bkirki, Lahoud,
who was accompanied by Qornet Shehwan members and
former MPs Nadim Salem and Camille Ziade, said the
visit was meant to express our rejection of
a victory based on a settlement, because we believe
that Gabriel Murr won through figures, based on
laws and legitimacy.
Lahoud said the victory, which the opposition has
claimed was secure on the night after the vote,
should be used to close the book on the civil
war, support democracy and implement a new electoral
law leading to better representation.
The Metn MP said that the electoral victory should
also be used to defend public liberties and
find the right solutions to economic problems.
Lahoud admitted that he had made a move
toward President Emile Lahoud, alluding to his visit
to Baabda Palace earlier this week, but said he
had nothing to do with the compromise that allowed
Gabriel Murr to win after Myrna Murrs withdrawal.
We have nothing to do with such a settlement,
he said.
Committee
to rework election law
Justice
Minister Samir Jisr said Tuesday he had formed a
committee of constitutional experts to rework the
election law, after a vote-counting debacle in the
recent Metn by-election.
Jisr said the new committees goals would involve
reviewing the role and accurately
defining the tasks of the Higher Vote Tabulation
Committee, which is staffed by judges.
The tabulation committee was involved in a fiasco
that saw different reports issued on the vote counts,
due to mistakes in tabulation and questions over
the prerogative to decide on how to tabulate votes
in the event of technical irregularities.
Jisr appointed Said Adra, who presides over a civil
appeals court, to head the committee, as well as
Albert Serhal, Antoine Baridi and Zuheir Shukr.
Shukr is a constitutional expert, Serhal is an adviser
to the Shura Council and Baridi a member of the
governments Consultation and Legislation Committee.
Article from dailystar.com.lb