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Lebanon President Michel Aoun has left the Presidential Palace marking the end of his six-year term without a replacement. It has left the small nation in a political vacuum that is likely to worsen its historic economic meltdown. 

As Aoun’s term ended, the country is being run by a caretaker government after Prime Minister-designate Najib Mikati failed to form a new Cabinet following May 15 parliamentary elections. Aoun and his supporters warn that such a government doesn’t have full power to run the country, saying that weeks of “constitutional chaos” lay ahead.

In a speech outside the palace yesterday, Aoun told thousands of supporters that he has accepted the resignation of



Mikati’s government. The move is likely to further deprive the caretaker administration of legitimacy and worsen existing political tensions in the country.

Mikati responded shortly afterward with a statement from his office saying that his government will continue to perform its duties in accordance with the constitution.

Many fear that an extended power vacuum could further delay attempts to finalize a deal with the International Monetary Fund that would provide Lebanon with some three billion dollars in assistance, widely seen as a key step to help the country climb out of a three-year financial crisis that has left three quarters of the population in poverty.



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