Moussa fails to end Lebanon impasse
Presidential election postponed yet again as Arab League chief winds up Beirut mission.

He said that both sides shared broad agreement on the need for changes to the country’s electoral law.
Lebanese deputies were due to hold a session on Tuesday to elect a new president. But the parliamentary speaker announced on Monday that the vote had been postponed – for the 15th time – to March 11.
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Suleiman is yet to be voted into power by Lebanon’s feuding factions [AFP] |
Relations between the two sides have further deteriorated since the presidential term of Emile Lahoud, who is widely perceived to be a pro-Syrian figure, ended in November 2007.
However, the opposition has so far boycotted parliamentary meetings to formally elected the consensus candidate, General Michel Suleiman, who is chief of the Lebanese army.
The opposition cites the failure to get veto rights in the cabinet as the reason for its boycott.
Tuesday’s session
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The pan-Arab Al Hayat daily reported on Monday that Hosni Mubarak, Egypt’s president, and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia said a new Lebanese president should be chosen before an Arab League summit in Syria in late March.
Ahmed Aboul Gheit, Egypt’s foreign minister, said last month that the success of the Damascus meeting was largely dependent largely on Lebanese leaders agreeing on a new president.
The US and the March 14 bloc say that Syria has sought to block the presidential election, a charge denied by Damascus.