Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Orange Room - FPM forum was hosted on Tayyar.org under the domain name forum.tayyar.org until October 2012. [ 31 ] On 5 October 2012, FPM forum was shut down due to a disagreement between the founder of the forum and FPM [ 32 ] which caused Orange Room and FPM to part ways and move the forum to an independent host oroom.org that remained ...
Future Television was a Lebanese owned and operated company founded in 1993. First launched in Lebanon on February 15, 1993, Future Television, although the youngest of the Lebanese stations back then, became the nation's fastest growing station.
Mar Mikhael Agreement (or Mar Mikhael Understanding or memorandum of understanding between the FPM and Hezbollah, Arabic: تفاهم مار مخايل) is a memorandum of understanding signed on 6 February 2006 [1] between the Christian Michel Aoun, the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, and the Shiite Hassan Nasrallah of Hezbollah, in the Mar Mikhael Church [2] in Haret Hreik, [3] in ...
Lebanon has hundreds of registered political parties. After 2005, when the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri precipitated the Cedar Revolution , the political landscape became polarized between two rival alliances, the March 8 Alliance and the March 14 Alliance .
The FPM split from the March 14 Alliance on 6 February 2006, when its leader Michel Aoun signed a memorandum of understanding with Hezbollah. [7] FPM considered its project against the Syrian government completed when the Syrian Army left Lebanon at the end of April 2005. [8]
Hadiqat al-Akhbar (The News Garden in English) is the first daily newspaper of Lebanon which was launched in 1858. [1] From 1858 to 1958 there were nearly 200 newspapers in the country. [2] Prior to 1963 the number of newspapers was more than 400. [3] However, the number reduced to 53 due to the 1963 press law. [3] [4]
Strong Lebanon (Arabic: تكتل لبنان القوي) is the parliamentary bloc of the Free Patriotic Movement and their allies in the Lebanese Parliament. Headed by Gebran Bassil , it consisted of 29 deputies after the 2018 general election [ 1 ] and shrunk to 17 deputies after the 2022 Lebanese general election .
The 2006–2008 Lebanese protests were a series of political protests and sit-ins in Lebanon that began on 1 December 2006, [1] led by groups that opposed the US and Saudi-backed government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and ended on 21 May 2008 with the signing of the Doha Agreement.