Lebanon minister Kordahi resigns to resolve Saudi Arabia dispute
Beirut, Lebanon – Information Minister George Kordahi, whose criticism of the Saudi-led military campaign in Yemen against the Houthi rebels sparked a diplomatic crisis, has announced his resignation, as cash-strapped Lebanon tries to resolve the weeks-long row.
“I won’t accept being used as a reason to harm Lebanon and
our Lebanese brothers in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries,” Kordahi said
at a news conference on Friday.
“The interests of my country and my people and supporters is
above my personal interest. Lebanon is more important than George Kordahi, and
the Lebanese interests are more important than a ministerial role.”
Kordahi said Prime Minister Najib Mikati had told him
earlier this week that his resignation would be a prerequisite for French
President Emmanuel Macron to discuss the diplomatic crisis with Crown Prince
Mohammad Bin Salman in Riyadh and defuse tensions between Lebanon and the
kingdom.
Macron on Friday began a Gulf tour that will see him visit
Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Kordahi was in office for less than three months, appointed
as part of Mikati’s government tasked with steadying Lebanon’s spiralling
economic collapse.
In October, videos of an interview he had given a month
before his appointment began surfacing online, in which he said the
Iran-aligned Houthis are “defending themselves … against an external
aggression” in Yemen. Kordahi also said the long-running conflict was “futile”
and called for it to end.
Several Gulf countries reacted swiftly to Kordahi’s
comments. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait and Bahrain recalled their envoys from
Beirut, as did Yemen, and banished Lebanese ambassadors. Bahrain and the UAE
also called on their citizens to leave Lebanon.
Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, banned all Lebanese imports into
the kingdom, further escalating an indefinite ban on all Lebanese produce and
agricultural products imposed in April after foiling an attempt to smuggle 5.3
million pills of the illegal amphetamine Captagon that had been hidden in a
shipment of pomegranates at Jeddah port.
Industrialists in Lebanon who frequently export to Saudi
Arabia told Al Jazeera the move was a further blow to their businesses and
urged the Lebanese authorities to resolve the diplomatic dispute.
“I never meant to insult anyone regarding my comments on the
war on Yemen,” Kordahi said at the news conference at the information ministry
in the capital, Beirut.
The resigned information minister also condemned an
“intentional and indiscriminate campaign” against him by several Lebanese
political leaders and media outlets which, he said, had skewed his comments.
“They portrayed what I said as a crime against Saudi Arabia,” Kordahi said.
The former celebrity presenter had on multiple occasions
refused to step down.
Mikati last month had implicitly asked for his resignation.
“I call on the minister of information to listen to his conscience, take the
position that should be taken and give priority to the national interests,” the
prime minister had said in a speech.
For his part, Arab League Assistant Secretary-General Hossam
Zaki said in a visit to Lebanon that Kordahi’s resignation was “somewhat on the
table”, and argued that the issue would have been defused if he immediately
resigned.
But the Iran-backed Hezbollah and Kordahi’s party, the
Marada Movement, had backed him. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah criticised
Saudi Arabia for violating Lebanese sovereignty and trying to stir conflict in
the country.
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