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Lebanon's Hariri set to become prime minister



By Nadim Ladki
26 June 2009 @ 05:00 pm BST

BEIRUT - Saad al-Hariri is set to be officially designated as Lebanon's prime minister on Saturday after a majority of parliamentarians nominated the U.S.-backed politician to the post on Friday, officials said.


Member of Parliament Sethrida Geagea chats with Lebanese Parliament majority leader Saad Hariri during a parliamentary session to elect the speaker in Beirut
Member of Parliament Sethrida Geagea (L) chats with Lebanese Parliament majority leader Saad Hariri during a parliamentary session to elect the speaker in Beirut June 25, 2009. Lebanon's parliament on Thursday elected Nabih Berri as speaker for the coming four years, extending his 17-year leadership of the chamber in a vote that underlined improved ties between rival politicians.
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They said 67 of 97 MPs canvassed by President Michel Suleiman told him they wanted the young billionaire to form the new cabinet, meaning he secured the required support of a majority of the 128-seat assembly. Suleiman will designate Hariri once he ends consultations with the remaining MPs.

The Beirut stock index rose 2.4 percent earlier in the day, in response to growing confidence that Hariri's nomination would be confirmed. Real estate company Solidere led the rally.

Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system reserves the premiership for a Sunni Muslim.

The sources said Hariri would be nominated by his coalition's 71 MPs as well as the 13 parliamentarians in a bloc led by Nabih Berri, an ally of the Shi'ite movement Hezbollah.

Berri, who was re-elected as parliament speaker on Thursday, told reporters after nominating Hariri that his bloc would not take part in any government unless it was one of "consensus and real participation."

Hezbollah and its Christian ally Michel Aoun, who have 12 and 18 MPs respectively, did not nominate Hariri or anyone else for the post. But Mohammad Raad, leader of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc, said the group was ready to cooperate with Hariri over the formation of the government.

Hariri, who led a U.S.-backed coalition to victory over Iranian-backed Hezbollah and its allies in this month's election, met Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah overnight.

A joint statement said the men, who had met only once before in three years, had discussed the outcome of the election and the possible shape of the new government.

Hezbollah had called for the formation of a national unity government with veto power for the minority alliance after the election, though the group has not repeated the demand since the vote. Hariri rejects such a veto.

© 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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