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March 14 Alliance

The March 14 Alliance (Arabic: تحالف 14 آذار, romanizedtaḥāluf 14 adhār), named after the date of the Cedar Revolution, was a coalition of political parties and independents in Lebanon formed in 2005 that were united by their anti-Syrian[1][2][3] stance and by their opposition to the March 8 Alliance. It was led by Saad Hariri, Walid Jumblatt and Samir Geagea, as well as other prominent figures.

March 14 Alliance
تحالف ١٤ آذار
LeaderSaad Hariri
Walid Jumblatt
Samir Geagea
General SecretaryFares Souaid
Founded14 March 2005 (14 March 2005)
Dissolved14 March 2016 (14 March 2016)
HeadquartersBeirut
IdeologyLebanese nationalism
Political positionBig tent
Colors    Red, white
Parliament of Lebanon
0 / 128
Cabinet of Lebanon
0 / 20
Party flag

History edit

The alliance was formed during public demonstrations which took place one month after the assassination of Lebanon's former Prime Minister, Rafiq Hariri, this was known as the Cedar Revolution. Two protests against Syria's 29-year occupation of Lebanon were staged because it was believed that Syria had supported the murder. The Alliance was given its name in honor of the day that Syrian forces left Lebanon, which is perceived as the major achievement of the Cedar Revolution.

The March 14 Alliance was made up of a range of sectarian and secular organizations that ordinarily have divergent political agendas. To pursue their shared interest in seeing Syrian forces leave Lebanon, the parties banded together.

Free Patriotic Movement's withdrawal edit

The Free Patriotic Movement of General Michel Aoun left the informal grouping before the 2005 general election, before March 14 was an established alliance, due to major disagreements and when its leader Michel Aoun signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Hezbollah.[4] After the 2005 elections, The Free Patriotic Movement was the sole political opposition, but one year later joined the pro-Syrian government March 8 Alliance in November 2006.

2006 Lebanon War edit

On 12 July 2006, the 2006 Lebanon War between Israel and Hezbollah started. During the war, the 14 of March Coalition took a stance against Hezbollah accusing the armed party of causing the war on Lebanon. However, Hezbollah claimed that Israel preplanned such a war, supposed to be waged on September during the annual rally Hezbollah holds on the International Qods (Jerusalem) Day.

The 14th of March coalition, amidst the war, urged Hezbollah to hand over their weapons, accusing the party of causing the war on Lebanon.

During the first few days of the war, former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited Beirut and held a meeting with the 14th of March coalition and declared afterwards that a new Middle East will be born after this war, saying: "It's time for a new Middle East". Rice and Fouad Siniora met during her visit to Lebanon.[5][6]

2008 clashes edit

In May 2008, the tensions between the pro-government and opposition parties escalated when the cabinet announced a series of security decisions. Tensions began with revelations on Friday May 2 made by Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt, a key politician in the ruling March 14 alliance. He announced that a remote-controlled camera had been set up in a container park overlooking Beirut international airport's runway 17, which was frequently being used by March 14 politicians.[7][8] In March 14 circles, fear was that the monitoring could be used for a possible attack on its leaders, as Lebanon had faced a series of political assassinations in recent times.[9] Although Jumblatt did not accuse the party directly, he made clear that he thought March 8's Hezbollah was behind the monitoring system's installment.[7] Hezbollah dismissed the accusations, calling the allegation a product of Jumblatt's imagination and saying that those who leveled them were scaremongering and simply parroting a US campaign against it and other groups which are resisting Israel.[8][9] In addition to the monitoring system, Jumblatt stated that Hezbollah had laid down a fiber optic telecommunication network connecting its powerbase in Dahiya in South Beirut with cities and towns in South and East Lebanon in predominantly Shiite areas.[8]

In its response to these allegations, the Lebanese cabinet announced that it regarded the telecommunication network and the monitoring system as a breach of law, undermining the state's sovereignty and the security of its citizens.[7][10] Therefore, it declared that the matter would be referred not only to the Lebanese judicial system, but also to the Arab League and the United Nations.[7][10]

Coincidentally, a day after the cabinet's decision, on Wednesday May 7, the Lebanese General Workers Union had planned a general strike to demand higher wages and decry high consumer prices.[11] The strike turned violent as the opposition threw their weight behind the strike, paralyzing large parts of Lebanon's capital Beirut.[11][12] Clashes later erupted throughout the country in the following weeks

2009 parliamentary elections edit

On 8 June 2009, March 14 won the majority in the Lebanese parliament with 71 out of 128 seats.[13]

14 out of 26 electoral districts were won by March 14:[14]

  • Akkar (7/7)
  • Minniyeh-Danniyeh (3/3)
  • Tripoli (8/8)
  • Koura (3/3)
  • Bcharreh (2/2)
  • Batroun (2/2)
  • Beirut 1 (5/5)
  • Beirut 2 (2/4)
  • Beirut 3 (10/10)
  • Aley (4/5) Jumblatt left an empty seat for Talal Arslan
  • Chouf (8/8)
  • Saida (2/2)
  • Zahle (7/7)
  • West Bekaa-Rashaya (6/6)

Progressive Socialist Party's withdrawal edit

In August 2009, the Progressive Socialist Party left the alliance, claiming political neutrality after the 2008 Lebanon conflict, though they still supported lists of March 14 members, mostly the Lebanese Forces.[15]

Downfall of the March 14 alliance edit

On 12 January 2011, March 8, with the help of Jumblatt, collapsed the government, which caused March 14 prime minister Saad Hariri to step down and be replaced by a March 8 prime minister, Najib Mikati. On 17 June 2011, Michel Aoun proudly said that he sent Saad Hariri a «one way ticket».[16]

2016 presidential elections edit

The March 14 alliance surprisingly supported the election of March 8-affiliated Michel Aoun, but only if mainly the Lebanese Forces got 7/20 of the governmental seats. Since the election and the formation of a new Government headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Michel Aoun and Samir Geagea signed the "Maarab agreement", and it was considered a historical peace between two rival and old political factions. Michel Aoun ended up not giving the requested seats to the Lebanese Forces. Sides that were against the election of Michel Aoun as president in the 2016 elections consisted of traditional parties such as the Kataeb party and the National Liberal Party. Since then, the political scene has been witnessing the emergence of new non-sectarian political groups such as Lihaqqi and Citizens in a State (MMFIDAWLA), as well as revolution-affiliated Taqaddom, in addition to many civil society groups who were loosely allied during the last parliamentary elections. Although they share a common goal to replace what they consider a failed political model that was introduced following the end of the civil war, leading to the 2019 protests, they are not unified in order to assimilate and conquer the prevailing government. The then-elected government was viewed as having failed its duties as a government and the Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, attempted to resign while he was in Saudi Arabia in 2017, but it was ruled unconstitutional. Later on, during the October protests he resigned as Prime Minister.

Death of the March 14 Alliance edit

In 2016, the March 14 Alliance experienced an end to its activities, without an official announcement detailing the reasons for its closure.[17] In the 2018 elections, Future Movement decided to make an electoral alliance with the Free Patriotic Movement in North III, Beirut I and Bekaa I which caused a split between long time March 14 allies Future Movement and the Lebanese Forces. In October 2018, Saad Hariri promised to allocate the Ministry of Justice to the LF (Lebanese Forces)[18] however, he ultimately appointed the FPM (Free Patriotic Movement) to that ministerial position instead. In October 2020, Samir Geagea refused to name Hariri to form the government.[19]

After the 2022 elections, the March 14 Alliance was replaced by the Lebanese Opposition[20] which was formed by the Lebanese Forces, Progressive Socialist Party, Kataeb, Renewal Bloc and sovereign independent MPs like Mark Daou and Waddah Sadek.[21]

14march.org edit

14march.org was the official March 14 alliance website. It went online on 9 March 2006[22] and was shut down by the Future Movement on 16 January 2019.[23]

Claims edit

The principal political claims of the March 14 Alliance were:

Ex-Member parties edit

Party Ideology Demographic base Party seats
Represented parties
Lebanese Forces Lebanese nationalism, Conservatism Maronite Christians
19 / 128
Future Movement Conservative liberalism Sunni Muslims
8 / 128
Kataeb Party Lebanese nationalism, Christian democracy Maronite Christians
4 / 128
Independence Movement Lebanese nationalism Nonsectarian (official)
Maronite Christians (majority)
2 / 128
Islamic Group Islamic democracy, Pan-Islamism Sunni Muslims
1 / 128
National Liberal Party National liberalism Nonsectarian (official)
Christians (majority)
1 / 128
Unrepresented parties
National Bloc Social liberalism, Lebanese nationalism
Historical:
Liberal conservatism
Nonsectarian (official)
Maronite Christians (majority)
0 / 128
Democratic Left Movement Social democracy Nonsectarian (official)
0 / 128
Democratic Renewal Social liberalism Nonsectarian (official)
0 / 128
Hunchakian Party Social democracy, Democratic socialism,

Armenian interests

Armenians
0 / 128
Armenian Democratic Liberal Party Classical liberalism, Armenian interests Armenians
0 / 128
Lebanese Option Party Moderate Shia Islamism, Liberalism and

Economic liberalism

Shia Muslims
0 / 128
Free Shia Movement Islamic democracy Shia Muslims
0 / 128
Syriac Union Party Syriac interests Syriac Christians
0 / 128
Shuraya Party Assyrian self-determination Assyrians (Christians)
0 / 128

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "March 14 Alliance" (PDF). Reut Institute. 12 December 2006.
  2. ^ Jacob, C. (21 March 2019). "As U.S. Secretary Of State Pompeo Prepares To Visit Lebanon, Hizbullah Is In Complete Control Of Lebanese Government – And The March 14 Camp, Saudi Arabia, And U.S. Have Cooperated With It And Come To Terms With The Situation". Middle East Media Research Institute.
  3. ^ Moubayed, Sami (6 May 2018). "After 9 years, Lebanon goes to the polls". Gulf News.
  4. ^ "Hezbollah reiterates commitment to Mar Mikhael agreement on its 12th anniversary". LBCI Lebanon. Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  5. ^ Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs. "Photo: Secretary Rice With Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora". 2001-2009.state.gov. Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  6. ^ "Rice Meets With Siniora In Beirut". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  7. ^ a b c d Arsan, Andrew (2018). Lebanon : a country in fragments. London: C. Hurst & Co. pp. 91–92. ISBN 978-1-78738-365-4. OCLC 1127917942.
  8. ^ a b c "Le chef du PSP révèle l'existence d'un réseau de télécommunications du Hezbollah reliant le Sud au Hermel Joumblatt met en garde contre une opération sécuritaire d'envergure visant la piste 17 de l'aéroport de Beyrouth". L'Orient-Le Jour (in French). 2008-05-03. Retrieved 2020-03-14.
  9. ^ a b Jim Muir (2008-05-03). "Hezbollah in airport spying row". BBC News. from the original on 6 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-10.
  10. ^ a b Blanford, Nicholas (2008-05-09). "Hezbollah phone network spat sparks Beirut street war". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  11. ^ a b Arsan, Andrew (2018). Lebanon: a country in fragments. London: C. Hurst & Co. pp. 93–94. ISBN 978-1-78738-365-4. OCLC 1127917942.
  12. ^ "LEBANON: High prices, low wages feed violent political stand-off". IRIN. 8 May 2008. from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  13. ^ "قوى "14 آذار" تفوز في الانتخابات النيابية".
  14. ^ "نتائج الانتخابات لكل دائرة انتخابية بشكل إجمالي".
  15. ^ EditorHA (2022-08-16). "فتور لا قطيعة بين الاشتراكي والقوات". صوت بيروت إنترناشونال (in Arabic). Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  16. ^ "عون: قطعنا one way ticket للحريري ولن يعود".
  17. ^ "تحالف 14 آذار اللبناني... نهاية بلا نعي رسمي".
  18. ^ "الحريري: جعجع حليفي الحقيقي".
  19. ^ "Geagea: Lebanese Forces Will Not Name Hariri".
  20. ^ "Alliance: Lebanon needs "Change" and "Opposition" to work together".
  21. ^ "Opposition officially endorses Azour for presidency".
  22. ^ .
  23. ^ "إغلاق موقعي "تيار المستقبل" و"14 آذار"..."

External links edit

  • [usurped]
  • Independence party Official Web Site
  • Kataeb Party Official website
  • National Liberal Party (Lebanon) Official website

march, alliance, arabic, تحالف, آذار, romanized, taḥāluf, adhār, named, after, date, cedar, revolution, coalition, political, parties, independents, lebanon, formed, 2005, that, were, united, their, anti, syrian, stance, their, opposition, march, alliance, saa. The March 14 Alliance Arabic تحالف 14 آذار romanized taḥaluf 14 adhar named after the date of the Cedar Revolution was a coalition of political parties and independents in Lebanon formed in 2005 that were united by their anti Syrian 1 2 3 stance and by their opposition to the March 8 Alliance It was led by Saad Hariri Walid Jumblatt and Samir Geagea as well as other prominent figures March 14 Alliance تحالف ١٤ آذارLeaderSaad HaririWalid JumblattSamir GeageaGeneral SecretaryFares SouaidFounded14 March 2005 14 March 2005 Dissolved14 March 2016 14 March 2016 HeadquartersBeirutIdeologyLebanese nationalismPolitical positionBig tentColors Red whiteParliament of Lebanon0 128Cabinet of Lebanon0 20Party flagPolitics of LebanonPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 1 1 Free Patriotic Movement s withdrawal 1 2 2006 Lebanon War 1 3 2008 clashes 1 4 2009 parliamentary elections 1 5 Progressive Socialist Party s withdrawal 1 6 Downfall of the March 14 alliance 1 7 2016 presidential elections 2 Death of the March 14 Alliance 3 14march org 4 Claims 5 Ex Member parties 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe alliance was formed during public demonstrations which took place one month after the assassination of Lebanon s former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri this was known as the Cedar Revolution Two protests against Syria s 29 year occupation of Lebanon were staged because it was believed that Syria had supported the murder The Alliance was given its name in honor of the day that Syrian forces left Lebanon which is perceived as the major achievement of the Cedar Revolution The March 14 Alliance was made up of a range of sectarian and secular organizations that ordinarily have divergent political agendas To pursue their shared interest in seeing Syrian forces leave Lebanon the parties banded together Free Patriotic Movement s withdrawal edit The Free Patriotic Movement of General Michel Aoun left the informal grouping before the 2005 general election before March 14 was an established alliance due to major disagreements and when its leader Michel Aoun signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Hezbollah 4 After the 2005 elections The Free Patriotic Movement was the sole political opposition but one year later joined the pro Syrian government March 8 Alliance in November 2006 2006 Lebanon War edit On 12 July 2006 the 2006 Lebanon War between Israel and Hezbollah started During the war the 14 of March Coalition took a stance against Hezbollah accusing the armed party of causing the war on Lebanon However Hezbollah claimed that Israel preplanned such a war supposed to be waged on September during the annual rally Hezbollah holds on the International Qods Jerusalem Day The 14th of March coalition amidst the war urged Hezbollah to hand over their weapons accusing the party of causing the war on Lebanon During the first few days of the war former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited Beirut and held a meeting with the 14th of March coalition and declared afterwards that a new Middle East will be born after this war saying It s time for a new Middle East Rice and Fouad Siniora met during her visit to Lebanon 5 6 2008 clashes edit In May 2008 the tensions between the pro government and opposition parties escalated when the cabinet announced a series of security decisions Tensions began with revelations on Friday May 2 made by Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt a key politician in the ruling March 14 alliance He announced that a remote controlled camera had been set up in a container park overlooking Beirut international airport s runway 17 which was frequently being used by March 14 politicians 7 8 In March 14 circles fear was that the monitoring could be used for a possible attack on its leaders as Lebanon had faced a series of political assassinations in recent times 9 Although Jumblatt did not accuse the party directly he made clear that he thought March 8 s Hezbollah was behind the monitoring system s installment 7 Hezbollah dismissed the accusations calling the allegation a product of Jumblatt s imagination and saying that those who leveled them were scaremongering and simply parroting a US campaign against it and other groups which are resisting Israel 8 9 In addition to the monitoring system Jumblatt stated that Hezbollah had laid down a fiber optic telecommunication network connecting its powerbase in Dahiya in South Beirut with cities and towns in South and East Lebanon in predominantly Shiite areas 8 In its response to these allegations the Lebanese cabinet announced that it regarded the telecommunication network and the monitoring system as a breach of law undermining the state s sovereignty and the security of its citizens 7 10 Therefore it declared that the matter would be referred not only to the Lebanese judicial system but also to the Arab League and the United Nations 7 10 Coincidentally a day after the cabinet s decision on Wednesday May 7 the Lebanese General Workers Union had planned a general strike to demand higher wages and decry high consumer prices 11 The strike turned violent as the opposition threw their weight behind the strike paralyzing large parts of Lebanon s capital Beirut 11 12 Clashes later erupted throughout the country in the following weeks 2009 parliamentary elections edit On 8 June 2009 March 14 won the majority in the Lebanese parliament with 71 out of 128 seats 13 14 out of 26 electoral districts were won by March 14 14 Akkar 7 7 Minniyeh Danniyeh 3 3 Tripoli 8 8 Koura 3 3 Bcharreh 2 2 Batroun 2 2 Beirut 1 5 5 Beirut 2 2 4 Beirut 3 10 10 Aley 4 5 Jumblatt left an empty seat for Talal Arslan Chouf 8 8 Saida 2 2 Zahle 7 7 West Bekaa Rashaya 6 6 Progressive Socialist Party s withdrawal edit In August 2009 the Progressive Socialist Party left the alliance claiming political neutrality after the 2008 Lebanon conflict though they still supported lists of March 14 members mostly the Lebanese Forces 15 Downfall of the March 14 alliance edit On 12 January 2011 March 8 with the help of Jumblatt collapsed the government which caused March 14 prime minister Saad Hariri to step down and be replaced by a March 8 prime minister Najib Mikati On 17 June 2011 Michel Aoun proudly said that he sent Saad Hariri a one way ticket 16 2016 presidential elections edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The March 14 alliance surprisingly supported the election of March 8 affiliated Michel Aoun but only if mainly the Lebanese Forces got 7 20 of the governmental seats Since the election and the formation of a new Government headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri Michel Aoun and Samir Geagea signed the Maarab agreement and it was considered a historical peace between two rival and old political factions Michel Aoun ended up not giving the requested seats to the Lebanese Forces Sides that were against the election of Michel Aoun as president in the 2016 elections consisted of traditional parties such as the Kataeb party and the National Liberal Party Since then the political scene has been witnessing the emergence of new non sectarian political groups such as Lihaqqi and Citizens in a State MMFIDAWLA as well as revolution affiliated Taqaddom in addition to many civil society groups who were loosely allied during the last parliamentary elections Although they share a common goal to replace what they consider a failed political model that was introduced following the end of the civil war leading to the 2019 protests they are not unified in order to assimilate and conquer the prevailing government The then elected government was viewed as having failed its duties as a government and the Prime Minister Saad Hariri attempted to resign while he was in Saudi Arabia in 2017 but it was ruled unconstitutional Later on during the October protests he resigned as Prime Minister Death of the March 14 Alliance editIn 2016 the March 14 Alliance experienced an end to its activities without an official announcement detailing the reasons for its closure 17 In the 2018 elections Future Movement decided to make an electoral alliance with the Free Patriotic Movement in North III Beirut I and Bekaa I which caused a split between long time March 14 allies Future Movement and the Lebanese Forces In October 2018 Saad Hariri promised to allocate the Ministry of Justice to the LF Lebanese Forces 18 however he ultimately appointed the FPM Free Patriotic Movement to that ministerial position instead In October 2020 Samir Geagea refused to name Hariri to form the government 19 After the 2022 elections the March 14 Alliance was replaced by the Lebanese Opposition 20 which was formed by the Lebanese Forces Progressive Socialist Party Kataeb Renewal Bloc and sovereign independent MPs like Mark Daou and Waddah Sadek 21 14march org edit14march org was the official March 14 alliance website It went online on 9 March 2006 22 and was shut down by the Future Movement on 16 January 2019 23 Claims editThe principal political claims of the March 14 Alliance were The exile of the former President Emile Lahoud reputed an illegitimate president under the Syrian regime in September 2004 Institution of a court for a case against Prime Minister Rafic Hariri s killers 1 Pacification with Syria and review of the Syrian Lebanese borders 1 Opposition to the Syrian interference in Lebanon 1 Institution of a weapons government monopoly disarmament of Hezbollah and review control of the Lebanese Armed Forces by the President and general Michel Suleiman and the police by the Prime Minister 1 Ex Member parties editParty Ideology Demographic base Party seatsRepresented partiesLebanese Forces Lebanese nationalism Conservatism Maronite Christians 19 128Future Movement Conservative liberalism Sunni Muslims 8 128Kataeb Party Lebanese nationalism Christian democracy Maronite Christians 4 128Independence Movement Lebanese nationalism Nonsectarian official Maronite Christians majority 2 128Islamic Group Islamic democracy Pan Islamism Sunni Muslims 1 128National Liberal Party National liberalism Nonsectarian official Christians majority 1 128Unrepresented partiesNational Bloc Social liberalism Lebanese nationalismHistorical Liberal conservatism Nonsectarian official Maronite Christians majority 0 128Democratic Left Movement Social democracy Nonsectarian official 0 128Democratic Renewal Social liberalism Nonsectarian official 0 128Hunchakian Party Social democracy Democratic socialism Armenian interests Armenians 0 128Armenian Democratic Liberal Party Classical liberalism Armenian interests Armenians 0 128Lebanese Option Party Moderate Shia Islamism Liberalism and Economic liberalism Shia Muslims 0 128Free Shia Movement Islamic democracy Shia Muslims 0 128Syriac Union Party Syriac interests Syriac Christians 0 128Shuraya Party Assyrian self determination Assyrians Christians 0 128See also editList of attacks in Lebanon March 8 AllianceReferences edit a b c d e March 14 Alliance PDF Reut Institute 12 December 2006 Jacob C 21 March 2019 As U S Secretary Of State Pompeo Prepares To Visit Lebanon Hizbullah Is In Complete Control Of Lebanese Government And The March 14 Camp Saudi Arabia And U S Have Cooperated With It And Come To Terms With The Situation Middle East Media Research Institute Moubayed Sami 6 May 2018 After 9 years Lebanon goes to the polls Gulf News Hezbollah reiterates commitment to Mar Mikhael agreement on its 12th anniversary LBCI Lebanon Retrieved 2022 09 03 Department Of State The Office of Electronic Information Bureau of Public Affairs Photo Secretary Rice With Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora 2001 2009 state gov Retrieved 2022 09 03 Rice Meets With Siniora In Beirut RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 2022 09 03 a b c d Arsan Andrew 2018 Lebanon a country in fragments London C Hurst amp Co pp 91 92 ISBN 978 1 78738 365 4 OCLC 1127917942 a b c Le chef du PSP revele l existence d un reseau de telecommunications du Hezbollah reliant le Sud au Hermel Joumblatt met en garde contre une operation securitaire d envergure visant la piste 17 de l aeroport de Beyrouth L Orient Le Jour in French 2008 05 03 Retrieved 2020 03 14 a b Jim Muir 2008 05 03 Hezbollah in airport spying row BBC News Archived from the original on 6 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 10 a b Blanford Nicholas 2008 05 09 Hezbollah phone network spat sparks Beirut street war Christian Science Monitor ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2020 05 10 a b Arsan Andrew 2018 Lebanon a country in fragments London C Hurst amp Co pp 93 94 ISBN 978 1 78738 365 4 OCLC 1127917942 LEBANON High prices low wages feed violent political stand off IRIN 8 May 2008 Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 17 قوى 14 آذار تفوز في الانتخابات النيابية نتائج الانتخابات لكل دائرة انتخابية بشكل إجمالي EditorHA 2022 08 16 فتور لا قطيعة بين الاشتراكي والقوات صوت بيروت إنترناشونال in Arabic Retrieved 2022 09 03 عون قطعنا one way ticket للحريري ولن يعود تحالف 14 آذار اللبناني نهاية بلا نعي رسمي الحريري جعجع حليفي الحقيقي Geagea Lebanese Forces Will Not Name Hariri Alliance Lebanon needs Change and Opposition to work together Opposition officially endorses Azour for presidency 14 March OFFICIAL إغلاق موقعي تيار المستقبل و 14 آذار External links editOfficial website usurped Independence party Official Web Site Kataeb Party Official website National Liberal Party Lebanon Official website Democratic Left Movement Lebanon Official website Tajaddod Democratic Renewal Movement Youth blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title March 14 Alliance amp oldid 1188063389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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