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Vatican envoy, Orthodox gathering discuss Christian presence in region
Vatican Ambassador to Lebanon Bishop Gabriel Caccia attends the 45th conference of the Council of Catholic Bishops in Bkirki, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. (Elie Mansour/The Daily Star)
Vatican Ambassador to Lebanon Bishop Gabriel Caccia attends the 45th conference of the Council of Catholic Bishops in Bkirki, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. (Elie Mansour/The Daily Star)

BEIRUT: The Vatican’s ambassador to Lebanon, Bishop Gabriel Caccia, met Friday with a delegation from the Orthodox gathering to discuss the situation of Christians in the Middle East given recent changes in the region.

The gathering’s secretary-general Michel Tueni, who headed the delegation, which included former MP Elie Ferzli, discussed with Caccia the situation of Christians in the east, particularly in Lebanon, in light of recent regional changes.

Tueni said that details of the gathering's proposal for a new electoral law in the country, which the organization is studying, were also discussed.

Lebanese Christians are working on a draft electoral law for the upcoming 2013 parliamentary elections. Bkirki, the seat of the Maronite Patriarchate, is studying ways to better represent Christians in Lebanon.

The Cabinet is currently evaluating a draft law for electoral law based on proportional representation, presented by Interior Minister Marwan Charbel.

The Orthodox gathering, which includes businessmen, politicians and Greek Orthodox clerics, was formed earlier this year in protest at what they say is the marginalization of the Greek Orthodox sect in Lebanon.

“[The proposal] would provide equal representation and would be in line with the Taif Accord,” the National News Agency quoted Tueni as saying about the draft law Friday.

Caccia spoke to the delegation about the work of the Vatican which aims at maintaining the Christian presence in the East.

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Orthodox Gathering / Lebanon
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Comments  
toufic December 09, 2011 04:53 PM
the question to ask is not to get permission to be preseted more in the parliament. Christians built this country and others destroyed it trying to erase their existance. if you have a history that is no less that 2012 years you cannot be erased nor marginalized...
Mowaten Libnèni December 09, 2011 09:11 PM
@ toufic: Unfortunately there are still many who live in the past, many who segregate and many who wish to remain in 'civil war era'. Today nobody can and I don't think anybody wants to erase anybody (except a vast minority of extremists who believe violence is the way to go in the Middle East).

Christians are the first who walked in Lebanon because Christianity came about long before Islam or the Druze. Christians and Muslims and Druze live peacefully in Lebanon, and hopefully neighboring countries will learn from us soon as well.

Christians of Palestine, Iraq, now Egypt and maybe Syria have been and are still being driven out of their nations, but in Lebanon... don't even think twice about it, it's impossible. We're a secular and multi-ethnic community, where Christians still enjoy political, social and economic power unlike other Arab states. This talk about Christians possibly being under threat or not existing in the future is useless.
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