BEIRUT, Lebanon Jun 30, 2005 — The president appointed an anti-Syrian official
Thursday to form Lebanon's first government free from Syrian influence in decades. As one
of his initial acts, the new prime minister visited the grave of his slain predecessor.
Fuad Saniora, a veteran banker and former finance minister, was nominated by 126 of the
128 parliament members, an unprecedented majority. He pledged to implement reforms and
called on all Lebanese factions to join hands to achieve those goals.
Saniora was a longtime trusted aide of Rafik Hariri, the former prime minister whose
February assassination triggered a sea change in Lebanese politics that led to the final
Syrian troop withdrawal in April after 29 years.
President Emile Lahoud was obliged to designate the legislator favored by the majority
even though relations between him and Saniora have been tense.
Saniora vowed to follow in Hariri's footsteps in fighting for "freedom, independence
and strengthening stability." He also pledged to find Hariri's killers. Hariri's
death, which the Lebanese opposition blames on Syria, triggered street protests and led to
the Syrian troop withdrawal.
Despite the unprecedented support, forming a government may prove difficult because
Lahoud, a pro-Syrian, can oppose the government makeup if it does not include his allies.
Anti-Syrian lawmakers who consider Lahoud a Syrian holdout have called for his
resignation, but he has refused to step down.
Lahoud met Thursday with several legislators who have been among his harshest critics in
recent months. But Saad Hariri, the son of the slain prime minister and head of the
anti-Syrian bloc that nominated Saniora, stayed away, as did the anti-Syrian leader Walid
Jumblatt.
Among Lahoud's visitors was Michel Aoun, the anti-Syrian legislator who returned to the
presidential palace for the first time since being ousted by Syrian and Lebanese troops
led by Lahoud in 1990. Aoun was interim prime minister at the time.
Saniora faces the difficult task of improving Lebanon's economy, suffering from a debt of
$35.6 billion, or more than 170 percent of the gross domestic product making it one of the
highest in the world.