Lebanon’s new PM begins bid to form long-awaited cabinet

(FILES) In this file handout photo released by Dalati and Nohra on March 22, 2013 shows Lebanese former prime minister Najib Mikati announcing the resignation of the Lebanese government during a press conference in Beirut. – Najib Mikati, a billionaire businessman and Lebanon’s latest premier-designate, is a political veteran viewed by some as emblematic of the crony politics that steered the country towards collapse. The parliamentarian and two-time premier who was again appointed to form a new cabinet on July 26, 2021 after months of stalled negotiations, returns to the post amid a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the world’s worst since the mid-19th century. (Photo by – / DALATI AND NOHRA / AFP)

Lebanon’s new prime minister-designate Najib Mikati was due to start consultations with leading political parties Tuesday with a view to forming a long-awaited government.


The billionaire politician, already twice a prime minister, was designated on Monday, days after Saad Hariri threw in the towel.

The government of Hassan Diab resigned following a deadly port explosion in Beirut last August and efforts to agree on a new lineup have proved fruitless.

The institutional vacuum is holding up a potential financial rescue plan for Lebanon, which defaulted on its debt last year and has since sunk into what the World Bank has described as one of the world’s most severe crises since the mid-19th century.

The designation of the 65-year-old Mikati, Lebanon’s richest man and to many a symbol of its corrupt oligarchy, was met with general scepticism.


Mikati, the third politician in a year to attempt the job, promised to form a government of experts, in line with a French roadmap conditioning a huge aid package on reform and transparency.

In an interview with the An-Nahar newspaper, Mikati vowed his lineup would be “purely technocratic”.

Tuesday’s meetings with the parliamentary blocs are the customary official step that follows a new prime minister’s designation but the high-stakes horse-trading has yet to begin.

The current caretaker government also describes itself as technocratic but each one of its members was endorsed by the political barons who have run the country for decades.

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