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[ Friday, 16 May 2008 ]
 
Arab League brokers talks on agreed upon six-point plan
Lebanon's leaders meet in Qatar to end crisis
Lebanese disabled in the 1975 civil war send out a message to rival leaders

DOHA (Agencies)

Lebanon's squabbling political leaders were to meet in Qatar on Friday for talks brokered by the Arab League aimed at ending a long-running feud that drove the country to the brink of a new civil war.

Leaders of the U.S.-backed ruling coalition and the Hezbollah-led opposition will try to forge a deal to end the standoff which has paralyzed government for 18 months and left Lebanon without a president since November.

After nearly a week of fighting that left 65 people dead and some 200 wounded, government and opposition parties agreed to a new national dialogue to elect a president and form a unity government.

A six-point plan was agreed in Beirut on Thursday, under the mediation of an Arab League delegation headed by Qatar's prime minister and foreign minister, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani.

Under the deal, the rivals undertook to launch a dialogue "to shore up the authority of the Lebanese state throughout the country," to refrain from using weapons to further political aims and to remove militants from the streets.

It also called for the removal of all roadblocks that have paralyzed the air traffic and closed major highways, and for the rivals to refrain from using language that could incite violence.

In the biggest challenge yet to Prime Minister Fuad Siniora, fighters from the Iranian-backed opposition rose up against pro-government forces last week, taking over swathes of west Beirut in the worst sectarian violence since the 1975-1990 civil war.

Hopes of a deal were raised on Wednesday after the government -- in a major climb-down -- cancelled controversial measures against Hezbollah that had triggered the unrest.

It rescinded plans to probe a private Hezbollah telecommunications network and reassign the head of airport security over allegations he was close to the powerful Shiite militant group, moves Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah had branded a declaration of war.

Parliament in Beirut is scheduled to convene on June 10 for its 20th attempt to elect a president. Damascus protégé Emile Lahoud stepped down at the end of his term in November, exacerbating a crisis that began in late 2006 when six pro-Syrian ministers quit Siniora's cabinet.

Both sides agree on army chief Michel Sleiman as Lahoud's successor, but they remain at odds over the details of a proposed unity government and a new law for parliamentary polls due next year.

Thursday's announcement said the Doha dialogue would be crowned by an end -- on the eve of any election of Sleiman -- to a long-running opposition sit-in that has left the heart of downtown Beirut a virtual ghost-town.

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