Syrian president holds historic Trump talks

US President Donald Trump (L) shakes hands with Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa at the White House in Washington DC. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump (L) shakes hands with Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa at the White House in Washington DC. (AFP)
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Syrian president holds historic Trump talks

US President Donald Trump (L) shakes hands with Syria’s President Ahmed Al-Sharaa at the White House in Washington DC. (AFP)
  • Both the arrival and the meeting of the Syrian president were taking place behind closed doors without the media present

WASHINGTON: Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa met US President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday for unprecedented talks, just days after Washington removed him from a terrorism blacklist.
Sharaa, whose opposition forces ousted longtime ruler Bashar Assad late last year, is the first Syrian leader to visit the White House since the country’s 1946 independence.
Formerly affiliated with Al-Qaeda, Sharaa’s group, Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS), was itself only delisted as a terrorist group by Washington in July. Sharaa himself was taken off the list on Friday.
“The president of Syria arrived at the White House... The meeting between President Trump and President Al-Sharaa has also started,” the White House said in a statement.
Unusually for the normally camera-friendly Trump, both the arrival and the meeting of the Syrian president were taking place behind closed doors without the media present.
Trump said last week that Sharaa was doing a “very good job. It’s a tough neighborhood. And he’s a tough guy. But I got along with them very well and a lot of progress has been made with Syria.”
Sharaa’s White House visit is “a hugely symbolic moment for the country’s new leader, who thus marks another step in his astonishing transformation from militant leader to global statesman,” said Michael Hanna, US program director at the International Crisis Group.
The interim president met Trump for the first time in during the US leader’s regional tour in May. At the time the 79-year-old Trump dubbed Sharaa, 43, a “a young, attractive guy.”
Terror blacklist removal
The US envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, said earlier this month that Sharaa may on Monday sign an agreement to join the international US-led alliance against Daesh.
The United States plans to establish a military base near Damascus “to coordinate humanitarian aid and observe developments between Syria and Israel,” a diplomatic source in Syria told AFP.
Washington has also been pushing for some kind of pact to end decades of enmity between Syria and Israel, part of Trump’s wider goal to shore up the fragile Gaza ceasefire with a broader Middle East peace settlement.
For his part, Sharaa is expected to seek US funds for Syria, which faces significant challenges in rebuilding after 13 years of devastating civil war.
After his arrival in Washington, Sharaa over the weekend met with IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva over possible aid.
He also played basketball with US CENTCOM commander Brad Cooper and Kevin Lambert, the head of the international anti-Daesh operation in Iraq, according to a social media post by Syria’s foreign minister.
State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said Sharaa’s government had been meeting US demands on working to find missing Americans and on eliminating any remaining chemical weapons.
Sharaa’s trip comes weeks after he became the first Syrian president in decades to address the UN General Assembly in New York. Last week Washington led a Security Council vote to remove UN sanctions against him.
The Syrian president has also been making diplomatic outreach toward Washington’s rivals. He met Russian President Vladimir Putin in October in their first meeting since the removal of Assad, a key Kremlin ally.


Lebanon set to free Hannibal Qaddafi after bail paid

Lebanon set to free Hannibal Qaddafi after bail paid
Updated 9 min 16 sec ago

Lebanon set to free Hannibal Qaddafi after bail paid

Lebanon set to free Hannibal Qaddafi after bail paid
BEIRUT: Hannibal Qaddafi, son of Libya’s deposed ruler Muammar Qaddafi, is expected to be released from a Lebanese prison after his bail was paid on Monday, his lawyer and a judicial official told AFP.
The younger Qaddafi, 49, has been in pre-trial detention for nearly a decade after his arrest in Lebanon on charges of withholding information about the 1978 disappearance of Lebanese Shiite cleric Mussa Sadr in Libya.
He was two years old at the time of Sadr’s disappearance.
“The bail was paid this morning,” Qaddafi’s French lawyer Laurent Bayon told AFP. “Hannibal Qaddafi will finally be free. It’s the end of a nightmare for him that lasted 10 years.”
In October, a judge ordered Qaddafi’s release against bail set at $11 million, which was reduced to $900,000 last week after an appeal by his defense team.
A Lebanese judicial source confirmed the bail was paid and said Qaddafi’s legal team was completing release procedures.
Bayon said his client was set to leave Lebanon for a “confidential” destination, adding that he holds a Libyan passport.
“If Qaddafi was able to be arbitrarily detained in Lebanon for 10 years, it’s because the justice system was not independent,” Bayon said.
He said the move toward his client’s release reflected a restoration of judicial independence under Lebanon’s reformist government that was formed in January.
Mussa Sadr — the founder of the Amal movement, now an ally of militant group Hezbollah — went missing during an official visit to Libya, along with an aide and a journalist.
Beirut blamed the disappearances on then Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi, who was overthrown and killed decades later in a 2011 uprising.
Ties between the two countries have been strained ever since the trio went missing.
Married to Lebanese model Aline Skaf, Hannibal Qaddafi fled to Syria after the start of the Libyan uprising.
He was kidnapped in December 2015 by armed men who took him to Lebanon, where authorities released him from the kidnappers and later detained him.