Middle East Monitor | – –
1. Saudi bans Citizens from traveling to Lebanon:
Saudi Arabia has advised its citizens against traveling to Lebanon and asked those in the country to leave as soon as possible, the Kingdom’s official news agency (SPA) quoted an official source in the Foreign Ministry as saying.
“Due to the circumstances in the Lebanese Republic, the Kingdom asks its citizens who are visiting or residing” there to leave as soon as possible, the source quoted by the news agency said, adding that Saudis were advised not to travel to Lebanon from any country.
Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned on Saturday while in Saudi Arabia, accusing Iran and Hezbollah of sowing strife in Arab states and saying he feared assassination.
Two top Lebanese government officials accused Riyadh of holding Hariri captive. A third told Reuters that the Saudi authorities ordered Hariri to resign and put him under house arrest.
Saudi Arabia and members of Hariri’s Future Movement have denied reports that he is under house arrest.
2.
Middle East Monitor: Lebanon believes Hariri ‘detained’ in Saudi, demands return
Lebanon believes Saad Hariri is held in Saudi Arabia, from where he resigned as prime minister, two top Lebanese government officials said, amid a deepening crisis pushing Lebanon onto the frontlines of a power struggle between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
A third source, a senior politician close to Saudi-allied Hariri, said Saudi Arabia had ordered him to resign and put him under house arrest. A fourth source familiar with the situation said Saudi Arabia was controlling and limiting his movement.
In a televised statement indicating deep concern at Hariri’s situation, his Future Movement political party said his return home was necessary to uphold the Lebanese system, describing him as prime minister and a national leader.
Hariri’s shock resignation, read out on television from Saudi Arabia, came as a shock even to his aides and embroils Lebanon further in a regional contest between Riyadh and Tehran.
Hariri’s exit fuelled wide speculation that the Sunni Muslim politician, long an ally of Riyadh, was coerced into stepping down by Saudi Arabia as it seeks to hit back against Iran and its Lebanese Shia ally Hezbollah.
In his resignation speech, Hariri denounced Iran and Hezbollah for sowing strife in Arab states and said he feared assassination. His father, a veteran former prime minister, was killed by a bomb in 2005.
Saudi Arabia has denied reports he is under house arrest.
But he has put out no statements himself to that effect, and has not denied that his movements are being restricted.
“Keeping Hariri with restricted freedom in Riyadh is an attack on Lebanese sovereignty. Our dignity is his dignity. We will work with [foreign] states to return him to Beirut,” said the senior Lebanese official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the government had yet to declare this position.
Saudi Arabia says Hariri resigned because Hezbollah, which was included in Hariri’s coalition government, had “hijacked” Lebanon’s political system.
#SaudiPurge
The resignation of Hariri, a business tycoon whose family made their fortune in Saudi Arabia, happened at the same time as a wave of arrests of Saudi princes and businessmen accused of corruption by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman.
The senior Lebanese politician close to Hariri said: “When he went [to Saudi Arabia] he was asked to stay there and ordered to resign. They ordered him to read his resignation statement and he has been held under house arrest since.”
Two US officials said the Saudis, led by Crown Prince Mohammed, had “encouraged” Hariri to leave office.
The fourth source said: “He is under controlled movement by the Saudis, limited movement.”
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Related video added by Juan Cole:
CBS: “Saudi Arabia tells citizens to leave Lebanon amid alleged corruption crackdown”