Republic of Lebanon | |
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Anthem: كلّنا للوطن (Arabic) Koullouna lilouataan lil oula lil alam (English: All of us! For our Country!) | |
Capital and largest city | Beirut 33°54′N 35°32′E / 33.900°N 35.533°E |
Official languages | Arabic |
Recognised languages | French |
Local vernacular | Lebanese Arabic |
Demonym(s) | Lebanese |
Government | Unitary confessionalist parliamentary republic |
Vacant | |
Najib Mikati | |
Nabih Berri | |
Legislature | Parliament |
Establishment | |
22 October 1989 | |
Currency | Lebanese pound (LBP) |
Calling code | +961 |
ISO 3166 code | LB |
Internet TLD | .lb |
The Second Republic (Arabic: الجمهورية الثانية, romanized: Al-Jumhūrīyah A-Thāniyah) is Lebanon's current republican system of government. It was established on 22 October 1989 by Lebanese political leaders and business people under the Taif Agreement.[1][2]
The Second Republic emerged from the slow erosion of the Lebanese Civil War and ratification of the National Reconciliation Accord, replacing the disproportional representation of the religious sects in Lebanon from 55:45 to 1:1 proportional representation of Christians and Muslims in parliament and political powers of Muslim-reserved prime ministerial position strengthened over Christian-reserved presidency position. This agreement, however, was put into practice on 24 December 1990. René Moawad was the first head of state to have been elected under this republic.[3]
History of Lebanon |
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Timeline |
Lebanon portal |