World, Middle East

Lebanon’s resigned PM dismisses captivity ‘rumors’

Saad Hariri attributes lengthy sojourn in Riyadh to ongoing ‘consultations’ about Lebanon’s future

17.11.2017 - Update : 18.11.2017
Lebanon’s resigned PM dismisses captivity ‘rumors’ Prime Minister of Lebanon, Saad Hariri

Ankara

By Wassim Samih Seifeddine and Hacer Baser 

BEIRUT

Lebanon’s resigned Prime Minister on Friday dismissed suggestions that he was being held captive in Saudi Arabia. 

“I have remained in the [Saudi] kingdom to take part in consultations on Lebanon’s future and its relations with its neighbors,” Saad Hariri stated on Twitter. 

He went on to dismiss allegations that he had been put under “house arrest” by the Saudi authorities, describing the claims as “mere rumors”. 

On Nov. 4, Hariri abruptly announced his resignation from the Lebanese premiership in a televised address delivered from Saudi Arabia. 

Earlier this week, Hariri -- who has yet to return to Lebanon -- denied suggestions that he was being held hostage, saying he would return to Beirut “soon”. 

Lebanese President Michel Aoun, meanwhile, has refused to accept Hariri’s resignation until the latter returns from the oil-rich kingdom. 

On Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron invited Hariri to visit Paris. 

Macron later stressed, however, that Lebanon’s resigned premier was not seeking political asylum in France.  

In his Nov. 4 resignation address, Hariri had accused Iran and its Lebanese ally, Hezbollah, of sowing “sedition” in the region.

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, for his part, has said there was “no reason” for Hariri to step down, accusing Saudi Arabia of forcing him to resign.

Last week, Thamer al-Sabhan, Saudi minister of state for Gulf affairs, dismissed the allegations, describing them as "lies" disseminated by Hezbollah.

Hariri was appointed prime minister late last year. Before his resignation, he had led a 30-member government that included Hezbollah representatives.

Saudi Arabia, Hariri’s long-time political patron, is Iran’s arch-foe in the region. Riyadh supports Syria’s armed opposition, while Iran and Hezbollah both support the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

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