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26 May 2009 Al-Jazeera -- Saad al-Hariri, the
leader of Lebanon's Future movement, has said he will
refuse to join a Hezbollah-led coalition government
should the Shia party and its allies win the country's
forthcoming elections.
Speaking to Al Jazeera on Tuesday, al-Hariri said that
a win for Hezbollah could have "consequences" for
Lebanon, but said he was confident his party and its
March 14 alliance allies would win.
He told Al Jazeera's James Bays that if Hezbollah won
the election on June 7 he would be "in the
opposition".
"If Hezbollah wins and its coalition - the 8th March -
I think it will have consequences on the country," he
said, although he would not specify what those
consequences might be.
"But I have faith in God and the people of Lebanon.
I'm not thinking of losing. I didn't run in this
election to lose."
He said that his party and its allies, a coalition
broadly opposed to Syrian influence on the country and
named after the date of Lebanon's Cedar Revolution,
were campaigning on economic issues.
"We want to give every single Lebanese a job," he
said.
Hezbollah angered
Tensions have risen in Lebanon before the June 7
election, which could see the Western-backed
government unseated by the Hezbollah-led opposition,
which is supported by Iran and Syria.
Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah's secretary-general,
reacted angrily on Monday to a report in the German
Der Spiegel magazine that alleged the group had been
involved in the assassination of Rafiq al-Hariri,
Saad's father and a former prime minister of Lebanon.
The Hezbollah leader said the report was part of an
"American-Israeli scheme" to stir up Sunni-Shia strife
and provoke a fight between Arabs and Persian Iran.
Der Spiegel's report quoted an unnamed source as
saying that the UN-backed tribunal into the
assassination had found evidence which suggested
Hezbollah had a role in the Beirut bombing that killed
Rafiq al-Hariri and 22 other people in February 2005.
Responding to the report, Israel's foreign minister
said that an international arrest warrant should be
issued for Nasrallah.
'Suspicious' report
Michel Sleiman, Lebanon's president, called the Der
Spiegel report "suspicious" and said it harmed the
work of a UN tribunal that is investigating the
killings.
Suleiman said that he was confident the tribunal would
not be used for political purposes.
After al-Hariri's death, many blamed Syria, which had
long dominated Lebanese affairs. Syria denied it had a
role.
Walid al-Moallem, Syria's foreign minister, dismissed
the report as "trash".
EsinIslam.Com
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