- Hrawi, Elias
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▪ 2007Lebanese politician (b. Sept. 4. 1925, Hawch Al-Umara, Lebanon—d. July 7, 2006, Beirut, Lebanon), as president of Lebanon (1989–98), helped bring stability to the country after its prolonged civil war and the 1982–85 occupation by Israel. Hrawi oversaw the disarming of all of the militias except Hezbollah, the consolidation of government power, and the rebuilding of the war-torn country, but he drew considerable criticism for accepting Syrian hegemony in Lebanon. Hrawi, a Maronite Christian, studied commerce at the Jesuit-run St. Joseph University in Beirut. He was elected to Lebanon's National Assembly in 1972, but the advent of civil war in 1975 all but destroyed the central government. He held the post of minister of public works (1980–82) but did not serve under the Phalangist president Amin Gemayel, who came to power in 1982. Hrawi helped to draw up the 1989 Al-Taʾif accord, which reconfigured the government to increase the representation and power of Muslims. Under the accord the former legislature (elected in 1972) met and elected René Moawad president. He was assassinated 17 days later, however, and the legislature chose Hrawi as Moawad's successor. In 1990 Hrawi invited Syrian troops to help him dislodge Gen. Michel Aoun, who did not recognize the legitimacy of Hrawi's presidency. The next year Hrawi signed a treaty of cooperation with Syria. In 1995 Syria engineered the extension of Hrawi's presidential term for another three years.
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Universalium. 2010.