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Salam holds diplomatic, institutional meetings at Grand Serail

Salam holds diplomatic, institutional meetings at Grand Serail

MTV Lebanon14-03-2025
Prime Minister Nawaf Salam met with Italian Ambassador to Lebanon Fabrizio Marcelli, at the Grand Serail.
Talks reportedly touched on bilateral relations and the government's key priorities. The ambassador reaffirmed Italy's support for Lebanon during this critical period.
Salam also received the newly appointed Director General of State Security, Major General Edgar Lawandos, in the presence of Supreme Defense Council Secretary General Major General Mohammad Mustafa. The prime minister congratulated Lawandos on his appointment and officially pinned his new rank insignia.
The PM then welcomed a delegation from the Children's Cancer Center of Lebanon, led by Association President Joseph Assily. The delegation invited him to participate in charity events scheduled for May 1 in Kuwait and May 15 in Beirut at Seaside Arena.
Salam later met with a delegation from the Druze Sheikh Akl's office, led by Sheikh Ghandi Makarem, who extended an invitation to the prime minister to attend an iftar hosted by Sheikh Sami Abi Al-Mona on March 21 at the community headquarters in Beirut.
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PM Salam condemns Hezbollah chief's civil war 'threats'
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Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem's statements on Friday morning, in which he said that Hezbollah would refuse to surrender its weapons to the Lebanese state and that his party was ready for a confrontation if one were imposed on it, sparked numerous vitriolic reactions within the Lebanese political class. "The remarks of Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem contain an implicit threat of civil war. However, no one in Lebanon today wants a civil war, and any form of threat or mention of one is completely unacceptable," Prime Minister Nawaf Salam posted on X, quoting an interview he gave earlier in the day to As-Sharq Al-Awsat. "We warn against any irresponsible behavior that could encourage discord and division." Former Presidents "To claim that the Lebanese government is implementing an American-Israeli project is baseless. Our decisions are purely Lebanese, taken within our Council of Ministers, and no one can impose them on us," the prime minister said. 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Today, after its defeat, it threatens the Lebanese state and people, portrays itself as a victim, and accuses the majority of treason," he said, according to a statement published by the state-run National News Agency (NNA). "Enough shirking responsibility. The only solution is: the state, the state, and the state. We warn you: stop threatening civil war." "It would be a catastrophe for everyone, and especially for you, after having alienated all the Lebanese communities and having harmed them," he added before inviting the party to abandon its allegiance to Iran, which he claimed was "collapsing today both internally and in all the areas where it has intervened." Justice Minister Adel Nassar, whose speech on al-Ghad TV was also relayed by NNA, criticized "the threat of some to destroy Lebanon to defend their weapons puts an end to the argument that weapons are intended for the defense of the country." In his interview, the minister also targeted the head of Hezbollah's parliamentary bloc, Mohammad Raad, who gave a similar speech in substance to that of Qassem during an interview with al-Manar a week ago. "The war in Lebanon is not an individual game ... Its decision is not taken in the name of a community, but with the signature of the entire nation," Industry Minister Joe Issa Khoury wrote on X. In a lengthy message on the same platform addressed to Qassem, Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel listed several articles of the Lebanese Penal Code that punish remarks similar to those made by the Hezbollah leader. Gemayel cited, in particular, Article 329, which punishes "any act aimed at preventing a Lebanese from exercising his rights," and Article 314, which states that "acts aimed at sowing panic, committed by means likely to create a public danger, such as explosives, flammable materials, toxic or destructive substances, microbial or pathogenic agents," are considered terrorist acts. His cousin and MP from the same party, Nadim Gemayel, directly addressed the Hezbollah leader: "There is no life for Lebanon as long as your weapons are outside the authority of the state." Ghayath Yazbeck, a Lebanese Forces MP in Batroun, also spoke out on X: "Sheikh Naim fights Israel with his words and destroys Lebanon with his actions, after the war paralyzed his party, rendering it inoperative and transforming its action into a mere sound phenomenon," he posted. "Do not threaten us, sheikh, with Karbalaization (referring to the death of Imam Hussein in Karbala in a sentence from the Hezbollah leader's speech); we are already immersed in a general massacre, and the deadly nihilism into which you have plunged Lebanon has no relation to the sacred and sublime spirit of Karbala. Spare the martyred environment and spare Lebanon." 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PM Salam blasts Qassem's remarks. 'They  carry a veiled threat of civil war'
PM Salam blasts Qassem's remarks. 'They  carry a veiled threat of civil war'

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