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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Lebanon MPs again fail to fill president for an eighth time

A view shows residential buildings during sunset in Beirut. A Reuters file photo
A view shows residential buildings during sunset in Beirut. A Reuters file photo
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Beirut: Lawmakers in crisis-hit Lebanon failed to elect a new president on Thursday for an eighth time, despite the deepening impact of the political deadlock on the country's economic woes.


Lebanon has been without a head of state for a month after president Michel Aoun left office at the end of October with no successor.


Parliament is split between supporters of the powerful Iran-backed Hezbollah movement and its opponents, neither of whom have a clear majority.


Lawmaker Michel Moawad, who is seen as close to the United States, won the support of 37 lawmakers on Thursday -- well short of the required majority -- while 52 spoilt ballots were cast, mainly by pro-Hezbollah lawmakers.


Only 111 of parliament's 128 lawmakers showed up for the vote.


Some MPs wrote in mock choices on their ballots, with one vote cast for Brazil's leftist president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.


Parliament is "not shouldering its responsibilities", charged lawmaker Antoine Habchi of the Lebanese Forces, a Christian party opposed to Hezbollah.


Electing a president, naming a prime minister and forming a government can take months or even years of political horse-trading.


Lebanon can ill-afford a prolonged power vacuum as it grapples with a financial crisis dubbed by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern history, with a currency in free fall, severe electricity shortages and soaring poverty rates.


The country's caretaker government is unable to enact the sweeping reforms demanded by international lenders as a condition for releasing billions of dollars in bailout loans.


Hezbollah opposes Moawad's candidacy, and the Iran-backed group's leader Hassan Nasrallah called last month for a president ready to stand up to the United States.


Moawad has good relations with Washington and has repeatedly called for the disarming of Hezbollah -- the only faction to keep its weapons after the end of Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war.


Former president Aoun's own election in 2016 followed a more than two-year vacancy at the presidential palace as lawmakers made 45 failed attempts before reaching a consensus on his candidacy.


Parliament is expected to convene for a new attempt to elect a president on December 8. — AFP


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