Rachid Solh

Lebanese politician

رشيد الصلح
Solh in 1960
Prime Minister of LebanonIn office
31 October 1974 – 15 May 1975Preceded byTakieddine SolhSucceeded byNureddine RifaiIn office
13 May 1992 – 31 October 1992Preceded byOmar KaramiSucceeded byRafic Hariri Personal detailsBorn(1926-06-22)22 June 1926[citation needed]
LebanonDied27 June 2014(2014-06-27) (aged 88)
Lebanon
Politics of Lebanon

Arab League Member State of the Arab League


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  • Constitution of 1926
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Rachid Solh (Arabic: رشيد الصلح; 22 June[citation needed] 1926 – 27 June 2014)[1] was a Lebanese politician and former Prime Minister, kin of one of the most eminent Sunni Muslim families in the country that brought several of its members to the office of prime ministers, and that was originally from Sidon but later moved its civil-records to Beirut.

Career

Solh was elected to the Lebanese Parliament as an MP for the first time in Beirut in 1960 and was appointed by then President of Lebanon Suleiman Franjieh as prime minister in 1974. Solh resigned from office on 15 May 1975, a few weeks after the outbreak of the Lebanese civil war.[2][3]

Following the resignation of the government of Omar Karami in May 1992, President Elias Hrawi was forced to form a new government and to hold the first parliamentary elections since the end of the civil war. The elections were boycotted en masse by the main Christian political parties who cited election fraud and corruption, and his term as prime minister lasted only five months. In 1996, Rachid Solh resigned from the Lebanese government and political life. [citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Liban: décès de l'ancien Premier ministre Rachid al-Solh – L'Orient-Le Jour". Lorientlejour.com. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  2. ^ Lebanese Premier Resigns The Telegraph (16 May 1975)
  3. ^ Haytham, Yusif (February 1976). "Lebanon Explodes: "Battles of Survival"". MERIP Reports. 44: 3–14. JSTOR 3011712.
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Lebanon
1974–1975
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Lebanon
1992
Succeeded by
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French Mandate
(1918–1943)
Lebanese Republic
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