General
Michel Aoun
Interviews
Press Releases, Articles & Letters
Speeches,
Lectures & Conferences
English
Press Releases, Articles, Messages & Letters
Articles,
speeches, releases, interviews, letters translated to English By: Elias Bejjani
General
Aoun visit to Canada 15-20/3/03
General Aoun, Prime Minister
In 1988, President
Amin Gemayel's term of office was nearing its end , and the different Lebanese
factions could not agree on a candidate to be his successor. Consequently, when
his term expired on September 23rd of that year, he appointed Army
Commander General Michel Aoun as Lebanon's Prime Minister. General Aoun formed a
government that worked toward the reunification of all parts of Lebanon, freeing
Lebanon from all foreign armies, and the restoration of democracy and freedom in
Lebanon. Meanwhile, Gemayel's acting prime minister, Salim al Huss, also
continued to act as the de facto prime minister. As a result, Lebanon was
divided between a Syrian-backed government in west Beirut, and the
constitutionally legal government of General Aoun in east Beirut.
In March 1989, an attempt by Prime Minister General Michel Aoun to close all
illegal seaports, and stop all kinds of drug production and smuggling, led to
what has come to be known as "Hareb al Tahreer" or Liberation War. Syrian forces
in the occupied parts of Lebanon opened fire on the liberated areas in order to
bring down the Lebanese government's agenda. Lebanon's army under the command of
Prime Minister General Michel Aoun defended the liberated areas against the
Syrian attacks. Shelling by the Syrians and their counter-parts caused nearly
1000 deaths and several thousand injuries, and further destruction of Lebanon's
economic infrastructure.
In May 1989, the Arab League empowered a High Committee on Lebanon, composed of
Saudi King Fahed, Algerian President Benjidid, and Moroccan King Hassan, to work
toward a solution in Lebanon. In July 1989, the committee issued a report
accusing Syria of assailing Lebanon's freedom and independence. After further
discussions, the committee arranged for a cease-fire in September, followed by a
meeting of Lebanese parliamentarians in Taef, Saudi Arabia.
After a month of intense discussions, the Lebanese deputies were forced and
bribed by Syria to agree on a Charter of National Reconciliation also known as
the Taef Agreement. In this agreement Syria would redeploy its soldiers in
Lebanon, rather than withdrawing. The Lebanese population residing within the
liberated parts of Lebanon opposed the Taef Agreement, as it violates national
sovereignty. For this, Prime Minister Aoun issued a decree in early November
dissolving the Lebanese parliament, calling for elections under the supervision
of the United Nations.
In November the dissolved parliament met at the Qleiat Air Base in northern
Lebanon, where they approved the Taef Agreement and elected Rene Moawad as a
president. Moawad was assassinated on November 22 by a bomb planted in his
armored car, although he was under strong Syrian protection (guess who killed
him!!!). The dissolved parliament met on November 24 in the Beeqa Valley and
elected Elias Hrawi to replace him.
The Syrians renewed their attacks on the liberated Lebanese areas. Meanwhile,
hundreds of Lebanese citizens rallied around the Lebanese Presidential Palace (Beit
el Shaab) to show their support of Prime Minister General Michel Aoun, and to
defend it against Syrian attacks. On October 13, 1990, a Syrian-led military
operation, in which fighter planes were used by the Syrians for the first time
in Lebanon, invaded the liberated areas of Lebanon. Prime Minister Michel Aoun
was forced to take refuge in the french embassy. The French President, Francois
Mitterand, declared that General Aoun's safety was a matter of honour to France,
and negotiated Prime Minister General Michel Aoun's safe departure to France
along with members of his government.
Today Lebanon is still occupied by over 40,000 Syrian soldiers, contrary to
what the dissolved parliament had agreed upon in the Taef Agreement. The
government in power in Lebanon is a puppet in the hands of Syria, denying people
freedom of speech. There are daily arrests without warrants. There is an outcry
as a result of the terrorizing methods employed by the Syrian intelligence
service against the Lebanese citizens, coupled with the deteriorating economic
situation in Lebanon. Prime Minister General Michel Aoun is still in France,
where he heads a number of international organizations, working peacefully
toward the achievement of a free Lebanon.
|