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Qatar ready to help Lebanon when new government is formed

Qatar ready to help Lebanon when new government is formed
A handout picture provided by the Lebanese photo agency Dalati and Nohra shows Lebanon's President Michel Aoun (R) meeting with Qatar's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani at the presidential palace in Baabda, east of the capital, on February 9, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 10 February 2021

Qatar ready to help Lebanon when new government is formed

Qatar ready to help Lebanon when new government is formed
  • The country’s politicians have failed to agree on a new government since the previous Cabinet stepped down after a monster Aug. 4 blast at the Beirut port

BEIRUT: Qatar’s foreign minister on Tuesday said his country was ready to help kick-start Lebanon’s flailing economy, but only if its deeply divided political class agreed on a new government.

“Under our policy, we only provide financial help through economic projects ... that will make a difference to the country’s economy,” Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said during a visit to Beirut.

But “this demands there be an independent government to work with,” he said at a press conference after meeting Lebanon’s president.

“As soon as a government is formed, Qatar will be ready to study all the options” and only then discuss “a comprehensive economic program to support Lebanon,” he said.

Lebanon is locked in its worst economic crisis in decades and desperately needs international aid, but donors have conditioned financial help on an independent Cabinet enacting sweeping reforms.

The country’s politicians have failed to agree on a new government since the previous Cabinet stepped down after a monster Aug.  4 blast at the Beirut port that killed more than 200 people and ravaged large parts of the city.

Two visits to the country by French President Emmanuel Macron have failed to bring the various sides together.

Sunni politician Saad Hariri, who made a comeback as premier-designate in October after stepping down under street pressure almost a year earlier, has struggled to put together a lineup to suit all sides.

Qatar has maintained good ties with all sides of the multi-confessional country’s political factions over the years, hosting them in Doha in 2008 to ink a deal after tensions came to a boil in the Mediterranean country.