Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

Site Template -- Geneology






Home Page

About Page

Photo Page

Favorite Links

  


Welcome my site
Home Page!


نؤمن بلبنان واحد ,كلي السيادة والاستقلال ,لا شريك له في ارضه ولا وصي على قراره ولا رقيب على حريته ,لبنان يتعاطى مع الاخرين من خلال المصالح المشتركة على نفس القدر من المساواة ويرفض اشراكهم في مصالحه وقراراته وارضه .

• Biography
Rafic Bahaa El Din Hariri
Born 1944 in the city of Sidon. His life was marked with continuous struggle. He lived up to the responsibilities that were entrusted upon him both nationally and politically, and as a businessman started from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, where he founded one of the biggest companies (Saudi Oger). He devoted his energies to the service of his country Lebanon which endured long years of war, his resources were put at the disposal of the state after 1982 Israeli invasion, and helped more than thirty thousand Lebanese students pursue their university studies in Lebanon, Europe and America. In order to put an end to the civil war in Lebanon, he partook in organizing the 1984 Lausanne conference and Taif conference of 1989 , the latter put an end to the war.

He was appointed Prime Minister of Lebanon for three successive governments on 22 November 1992, 21 May 1995 and 24 October 1996. While in government, he launched the biggest construction program in the history of his country. One of its more salient features is the rebuilding of the Beirut Central District that began in 1994. He is known for his international relations and broad diplomatic contacts, especially in the face of Israeli aggression on Lebanon and for encouraging businessmen and foreigners. To invest in Lebanon. He is the holder of many decorations from most kings, princes and heads of Arab and friendly states.

The President of the Council of Ministers, Mr. Rafic Hariri, has been at the helm of five governments in Lebanon since 1992. For over a decade, Prime Minister Hariri has presided over the physical and economic reconstruction of a Lebanon torn by war. No such work has ever been accomplished under this limited time frame and conditions. Prime Minister Hariri is heading the current government after having been elected to office in April 17, 2003 and having received the support of 93 out of the 128 Members of the Lebanese Parliament.


Personal Information
Mr. Hariri was born in Sidon, Lebanon, in 1944, to parents who were dedicated to their three children, Rafic, Shafic, and Bahia. Mr. Hariri studied at elementary and secondary schools in Sidon, and pursued university studies at the Arab University of Beirut, majoring in commerce. He moved to Saudi Arabia in 1965 in search of a better life, working there as a school teacher, and as an accountant before starting his business as an entrepreneur, which took him very far thanks to his hard work, perseverance and ethics. He was able to build and deliver a hotel in Taef, Saudi Arabia in six months, a task rather impossible. There he married Mrs. Nazik Audeh Hariri and are parents to seven children and now seven grandchildren.

Prime Minister Rafic Hariri is a philanthropist, a self-made man who built his businesses single-handedly on the basis of his reputation as an honest, credible and trustworthy partner in all his endeavors. He believes that trust is the most important asset that guides people, personal and business relations alike. He is also renowned for his efficiency and dedication to his work and to every cause he champions as his quick rise in Saudi Arabia shows.

Mr. Hariri began his involvement in the political and economic life of his country long before he became prime minister. As a Lebanese businessman living in Saudi Arabia, he was concerned about the ongoing strife in Lebanon and he played a behind-the-scenes role as a mediator, advisor and promoter of cease-fires and agreements to end the civil war. He invested his time and contacts in the Arab world and outside to bring peace to his war-torn country. In 1982 for example, after the Israeli invasion, his firm, Oger Liban, became actively involved in the removal of destroyed buildings, the opening of streets and roads littered with roadblocks and sand bags, which paved the way for the resumption of normal life in the Lebanese capital.

In 1984, Mr. Hariri participated in the Geneva and Lausanne conferences to bring about political reconciliation in Lebanon and helped broker initiatives to put an end to the civil war.

In 1989, Mr. Hariri was the power behind the Taef Agreement, which succeeded in ending the war and the drafting of a new constitution for Lebanon. This agreement was the political contract that laid down the principles of national reconciliation, which governs political life in Lebanon today.


The years of Partnership
Mr. Hariri returned to Lebanon in 1992 to assume office as prime minister after 28 years of living and working in Saudi Arabia. He formed his first government on October 22, 1992. He shouldered the responsibility for helping guide a country that had just emerged from 17 years of civil war with all the legacy of that conflict: massive physical damage, an economy in tatters, and political divisions.

As President of the Council of Ministers, Mr. Hariri took up the challenge. He immediately ushered Lebanon into the post-war era, starting a massive reconstruction effort that transformed Lebanon, in less than six years, from a war-torn country to a huge reconstruction site domestically, and a respected player on the international scene. Prime Minister Hariri declared everything a priority when he was faced with the question of what to start rebuilding first: schools, hospitals, infrastructure, or the economy?

At the same time, the government focused on stabilizing the Lebanese pound and rebuilding infrastructure through restoring basic services in the country, i.e. water, electricity, phones, and cleaning Beirut of the debris of the war. The President of the Council of Ministers also paid special attention to the social, educational and health problems that Lebanon was facing as a result of the war.

In April 1993, Mr. Hariri, established the Ministry for the Displaced to help thousands of people who were forced to flee their homes during the war to return to their towns and villages. In that same year (July 25, 1993) however the country became the scene of a seven-day bombing campaign against Lebanon and its civilian population. Prime Minister Hariri called for an emergency Arab meeting, held in Damascus, and secured Arab support for Lebanon.

Despite these events, Mr. Hariri launched in May of 1994 the project to rebuild the Beirut Central District (BCD), which was totally destroyed during the war. Mr. Hariri believed then, and still believes today, that rebuilding the heart of Beirut would bring life to all of Lebanon. He proved to be right. The heart of Beirut is now the meeting place for all Lebanese and also for Arabs and foreigners at large, who come by the thousands to enjoy Beirut. It is now the financial district and centre of the country’s institutions. Among all of the reconstruction projects launched by his governments, the reconstruction of downtown Beirut is the closest to Mr. Hariri’s heart and the one he worked on long before becoming Prime Minister. The reconstruction process was undertaken during the continued Israeli occupation of South Lebanon and the constant threat of Israeli attacks against the country’s infrastructure, especially its electricity sector.

In May 1995, the President of the Council of Ministers Mr. Rafic Hariri formed his second government and he set about continuing the process of reconstruction.

In the spring of 1996, Israel launched an attack against Lebanon, killing more than one hundred Lebanese civilians at a UN post in Qana in South Lebanon, as part of a military campaign that Israel called the “Grapes of Wrath.” Prime Minister Hariri launched a diplomatic campaign to stop the Israeli aggression. His efforts succeeded in focusing world attention on the Israeli occupation of South Lebanon and culminated in a ceasefire agreement, known as the April Understanding. This understanding forced Israel to accept, for the first time, keeping civilians out of the military confrontation in South Lebanon. The parties to the understanding formed a Monitoring Group to oversee compliance with the ceasefire, and agreed on a framework to assist in the reconstruction of Lebanon. Since then the overall situation has stabilized and the country has registered positive signs of growth.

On September 1, 1996, Lebanon held a round of parliamentary elections and Prime Minister Rafic Hariri was elected a Member of Parliament along with thirteen candidates on his electoral list. He formed his first parliamentary bloc. On November 25, 1996, Prime Minister Hariri was asked to form his third consecutive government. Under this government, in the summer of 1998, Lebanon held its first municipal elections for 35 years. The government reopened the new Beirut International airport and succeeded in breaking down international isolation through the lifting of American travel restrictions.

On October 23, 2000, the President of the Council of Ministers, Mr. Rafic Hariri, was designated to form his fourth cabinet, after his parliamentary bloc won all of the seats in Beirut on September 3, 2000. The Prime Minister won the support of 106 out of the 128 MPs to form a government.

Reviving the economy has been at the core of Hariri’s strategy and attracting foreign investors back to Lebanon after a long absence was seen as primordial.

On October 20, 2004, Mr. Hariri presented the resignation of his government, declining to form a new government.


International achievements
Friends of Lebanon
In December 1996, the first international conference whose only target was to help Lebanon was held at the State Department in Washington, under the auspices of the United States with Prime Minister Hariri as co-chairman of the conference. Representatives of international organizations, financial institutions and businesses of more than thirty countries attended the conference. Many of the participating countries pledged financial or technical help for Lebanon. It was crucial for Lebanon to return to the financial scene and continue to raise the capital needed to sustain the reconstruction and development effort. To that end two major conferences, PARIS I and PARIS II were held subsequently in order to request help from the international community to help Lebanon manage its public debt.

PARIS I On February 27, 2001, Prime Minister Hariri headed the Lebanese delegation to the second Friends of Lebanon conference at the Elysée Palace in Paris under the auspices of French President Jacques Chirac. The conference was dubbed the Paris I meeting. This meeting was attended, in addition to Prime Minister Hariri and President Chirac, by EU Commissioner Romano Prodi, World Bank President James Wolfensohn, European Investment Bank Vice-President Francis Meyer, French Finance Minister Laurent Fabius, and other prominent European, French and Lebanese officials.

Key reform initiatives presented: Prime Minister Hariri presented his government’s economic reform program, which was based on several basic elements:
• Stimulating and modernizing the economy,
• Following up the process of modernizing the tax system
• Ensuring the structural improvement of general public finances
• Preserving monetary and financial stability as well as price stability.

Results of the conference: The Lebanese government’s reform program won the support of the participants of the conference, and the World Bank and the European Investment Bank agreed to provide Lebanon with 500 million Euros to finance development projects.

Paris II
On November 23, 2002, President Jacques Chirac of France hosted the "Paris II" meeting at the Elysée Palace, entitled: “After Construction and Recovery, Toward Sustainable Development”. Paris II was attended by key officials from several countries and multilateral institutions.

Objective of the conference: To seek support of the international community in helping Lebanon in its endeavor to alleviate the burden of the public debt and to reverse the macroeconomic and fiscal imbalances of the Lebanese economy. The help would consist in extending long-term financing at interest rates significantly lower than the rates at which the government borrowed in the domestic and international markets.

Convening this conference was an unprecedented positive sign of the economic and political support made available to Lebanon. It reflected the consensus of the international community on the government’s commitment towards Lebanon financial and economic program.

Key reform initiatives presented:
• Structural reform of the various administrations and institutions
• Boosting productivity of the public sector and improving competitiveness
• Stimulating economic growth and improving the investment climate

Results of the conference: According to the Ministry of Finance, $10.1 billion of grants and loans resulted from Paris II. Funds amounting to $ 2.4 billion were provided by seven lending countries, $3.6 billion from a scheme arranged by commercial banks operating in Lebanon and $4.1 billion from the Central Bank scheme.

The Hariri foundation
If there is anything that defines Mr. Hariri and points to his proudest achievement, it is, by his acknowledgement, the Hariri Foundation. It is a testimony to the importance that he gives to education and future generations. He admits that the work of the foundation is the closest to his heart. He founded the Hariri Foundation in 1979, a non-profit organization that helped educate more than 33.000 Lebanese students in the best universities in Lebanon, the U.S., the U.K, France, and Canada.

The Hariri Foundation provides also health, social and cultural services to the needy in Lebanon as well as promotes cultural issues and children’s welfare. It maintains offices in Lebanon, Paris and Washington

The assasinatin

Former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was among 18 people killed on Monday when a massive bomb blast hit his motorcade in central Beirut.

The powerful bomb blast took place in front of the five-star hotels St. George and Phoenicia-Intercontinental in the Lebanese capital's famed Corniche overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. The explosion left a 5 meter (15-foot) crater in the street and spread thick dust and ash over the debris.

One of Hariri's senior bodyguards and officials at the American University of Beirut hospital confirmed Hariri's death. The hospital, which said it had seen another nine bodies and more than 100 injured, said Hariri was dead on arrival.

Witnesses reported seeing at least 10 bodies on the scene.

Bystanders and emergency officials rushed to aid the injured, including one man who climbed from a car window ablaze.

Former Economy Minister Basil Fuleihan, riding in the motorcade, was critically wounded, Reuters reported.

It was unclear if the explosives had been packed into a vehicle.

Hariri, 60, a multi-billionaire businessman who resigned from government last October, recently joined calls by the opposition for Syria to quit Lebanon in the run-up to general elections in May, Reuters reported.

Hariri served as prime minister from 1992-98 and again from 2000 until his resignation after parliament amended the Lebanese constitution to extend Syrian-backed President Emile Lahoud's term by three years. Lahoud had been set to leave office last November. (Hariri profile)

At least six fires were burning in the immediate aftermath of the blast, which took place at about 1 p.m. (1100 GMT).

Several of the vehicles from Hariri's convoy were torn apart and set on fire despite their armor plating, Reuters reported.

The explosion was heard as far away as the eastern hills overlooking the city, AP said.

Heavily armed security forces cordoned off the area with yellow tape as rescue workers and investigators combed the scene apparently looking for casualties or clues to what caused the huge explosion.















 

Sign and View Guestbook

 

Contact Us

If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, please  send an e-mail to: lives4ever@yahoo.com



IN search of the truth
S-serial killers
y-why moo
R-Rafic Hariri
I-independent Lebanon
A-allah akbar
Your day
Is coming moo