An important
meeting for the future of Lebanon took place yesterday in Bkerke between
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi and a delegation of Hezbollah, led by Sayyed
Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed, head of the political council of the Party of God ( in the picture).
The formal motivation was the presentation
of congratulations on the Patriarch's appointment as cardinal, to which he
responded with a less formal invitation to the ceremony in Rome on 24 November.
The
occasion was used, however, for an exchange of views on key issues, such as the
new electoral law and, above all, for finding a way out of a crisis that has
long held the Land of Cedars in political stalemate.
Card. Rai is very
cautiously moving on this front. The
meeting with the Shi'ite group in fact follows those with the opposition, the
14 March party led by Fouad Siniora, and with Christian politicians such as
Michel Aoun.
This
in an attempt to "open a breach in the wall" in place between the
political forces. A
line that actually sees the patriarch sided with President Michel Sleiman.
For his part, Sayyed called the
meeting with the Patriarch as "an opportunity to discuss issues affecting
the Lebanese" and for agreement on the "use of dialogue to resolve
differences".
The
same Sayyed, however, has denied that there is the possibility of creating a
"neutral government" suggested by March 14.
In principal, the Patriarch and
Shiites have both agreed on the need for a new electoral law. Card. Rai
wants it to be "truly representative of all parts of society and that safeguards
coexistence."
Sayyed
explained that Hezbollah's support for a proportional electoral law "means
that we reject that of 1960" and the new one "must ensure effective
representation and maintain collaboration between the public and the political
authority."
What
concrete steps these affirmations will produce remains to be seen.