Ahmad Fatfat

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Ahmad Fatfat (born March 28, 1953) is a Lebanese politician from Danniyeh, North Lebanon. He is currently the Minister of Youth and Sports in the cabinet of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora. From February to November 2006 he was the interim Interior Minister in the same cabinet.

Contents

Biography

Born to one of the biggest families in Danniyeh, Fatfat holds a degree in medicine and lives in Tripoli. He first emerged onto the Lebanese political scene as a candidate for the Lebanese Parliament in the first parliamentary elections in Lebanon after the end of the Lebanese civil war, in 1992. Fatfat failed to reach parliament that year, but succeeded in the next elections in 1996, with backing from Rafik Hariri and his Future Movement. Fatfat was re-elected to office in 2000, breaking into parliament as the highest vote-getter in his district of Dannyieh, North Lebanon. As the Future Movement's candidate he defeated future vice Prime Minister Issam Fares with a large margin. Fatfat's activism and involvement with Hariri, and his more vocal role during the turbulent period following the assassination of Hariri, catapulted him along with all the March 14 Alliance candidates to a sweep of all of North Lebanon's 28 parliamentary seats.

Minister of the Lebanese Government

In June 2005, Fatfat was appointed as the Minister of Youth and Sports in Fouad Siniora's first cabinet. On February 5 2006, after the resignation of Hassan Sabeh, he became interim Interior Minister, a position he held until November 14 of the same year when Sabeh reclaimed his office following the assassination of Industry Minister Pierre Amine Gemayel.

Following the burning of the Danish embassy and of several churches in East Beirut's Christian boroughs in February 2006 (at the time of the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy), Fatfat accused "radical Shiite elements" and "Christian troublemakers allied with the Syrian regime". He later had to retract this statement when it turned out that all of the anti-Christian rioters arrested on that day by the Lebanese police were radical Sunni Islamists, many of them members of minister Fatfat's own Future Movement.[1]

During the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict Fatfat defended the Lebanese soldiers who were filmed while serving tea to Israeli troops, saying: "This force is not on a combat mission."[2] This episode is often ridiculed by Fatfat's political opponents.

Sources

Notes

  1. ^ Sources : Nouvel Observateur, Feb 8 2006.
  2. ^ CNN:Video provokes questions of Lebanese army

External links

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