Hezbollah and allies resign, toppling Lebanon govt

BEIRUT, (Reuters) – Ministers from Hezbollah and its  allies resigned today, toppling the Lebanese government  of Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri before expected indictments  against the Shi’ite group over the killing of Hariri’s father.
Lebanese politicians had said yesterday that Saudi Arabia  and Syria failed to reach a deal to contain tensions over the  U.N.-backed tribunal, which is expected to issue draft  indictments soon over the 2005 assassination of Rafik al-Hariri.
The ministers resigned as Saad al-Hariri was meeting U.S.  President Barack Obama, and the White House later released a  statement criticising Hezbollah’s moves and warning against any  “threats or action” that could destabilise Lebanon.
Hariri’s office said he left Washington after the talks,  heading for Paris to meet President Nicolas Sarkozy tomorrow.
Analysts said the resignations could set the stage for  protracted political turmoil in Lebanon.
They played down prospects of a repeat of the violence of  May 2008, when gunmen took over Beirut after government moves  against Hezbollah. But Sunni power Saudi Arabia, which backs  Hariri, warned the resignations “will cause clashes once again”.
The Shi’ite Hezbollah has denied any role in the 2005  killing. Its leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, has attacked the  tribunal as an “Israeli project” and urged Hariri to renounce  it. The Sunni Muslim premier has resisted Hezbollah’s demand.
Announcing the resignations, Christian government minister  Gebran Bassil blamed Washington for obstructing the Saudi-Syrian  efforts and called on Lebanon’s president to “take the required  steps for forming a new government.”
A stalemate over the tribunal has crippled Hariri’s  14-month-old “unity” government. The cabinet has met, briefly,  just once in the last two months and the government could not  secure parliamentary approval for the 2010 budget.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Lebanon’s  coalition crisis was a transparent attempt to subvert justice,  but vowed that the work of the U.N.-backed tribunal would go on.