Lebanon's Siniora begins cabinet talks

Lebanese prime minister-designate Fouad Siniora began talks with lawmakers today on forming a national unity government in which…

Lebanese prime minister-designate Fouad Siniora began talks with lawmakers today on forming a national unity government in which Hizbullah-led minority factions will wield veto power.

The new cabinet will give Iranian- and Syrian-backed Hizbullah and its allies the power to block key decisions. But its advent will also be another step towards reviving state institutions after an 18-month political crisis that paralysed government and pushed the country to the brink of civil war.

A Qatari-mediated deal earlier this month ended a sometimes violent standoff between the US-backed ruling coalition and the opposition spearheaded by the Shia Hizbullah group.

Under the agreement, majority factions will be allocated 16 ministers, the opposition 11 and the president three.

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Lebanon's new president, former army chief Michel Suleiman, reappointed Mr Siniora prime minister on Wednesday, asking him to form a cabinet set to rule until a 2009 parliamentary election.

Mr Siniora will consult members of parliament from across the political spectrum in talks expected to last into next week.