BEIRUT (Reuters) - - Lebanon's political crisis deepened on Monday as a depleted cabinet approved draft U.N. statutes for a tribunal to try the killers of ex-premier Rafik al-Hariri despite the resignation of six pro-Syrian ministers.
Official sources said the Western-backed government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora would now send the draft back to New York and wait for the final text on the special court to return.
The move coincided with a political storm that threatens to spill into street confrontations.
Environment Minister Yacoub Sarraf, loyal to Syrian-backed President Emile Lahoud, resigned shortly before the cabinet met. Five Shi'ite Muslim ministers from Hezbollah and its ally, the Amal movement, quit on Saturday over the collapse of talks on their demands for effective veto power in the government.
Nine of the cabinet's 24 members must resign for it to fall. A Sunni Muslim minister quit in February, though his resignation was not accepted, leaving 17 ministers in the cabinet.
Politicians and analysts said the crisis was likely to spill into street confrontations that could shatter stability and damage efforts to recover from a devastating war with Israel.
"It's hard to see how this situation will be resolved without there being some violence," Andrew Exum, research fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told Reuters.
"The hope is that if there is a clash it will shock everyone back to the negotiating table before it gets out of hand."
The crisis dragged the country's stock market lower with the BLOM stock index ending the day 2.23 percent lower.
The anti-Syrian majority coalition has accused Hezbollah of implementing a Syrian-Iranian plan to overthrow the government and to foil efforts to set up the court to try Hariri's killers.
Sarraf, a Christian, said in a letter to Siniora that he was resigning "as I can't find myself part of any constitutional authority that lacks representation from a whole religious sect".
Siniora has rejected all the resignations but a senior source close to the ministers said they stood by their decision.
Lahoud opposed holding the cabinet session, saying that any such meeting after the resignations would be unconstitutional. Siniora said his government was still legitimate.
The United States has already accused Iran, Syria and Hezbollah of plotting to topple the government, which Washington holds up as an example of emerging democracy in the Middle East.
Hezbollah has denied trying to obstruct the Hariri tribunal, saying it had agreed to it but wanted to discuss the details.
Hezbollah said on Sunday it would stage peaceful street protests as part of a campaign to press its demands for better representation in government for its allies, especially Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun.
Anti-Syrian leaders have pledged counter-demonstrations should Hezbollah take to the streets, raising fears of violence at a time of rising tension between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims.
Many Lebanese blame Syria for the killing of Hariri, a Sunni, in a suicide truck bombing. Damascus denies involvement.
Hariri's 2005 assassination led to mass protests against Syria. Under international pressure, Syria ended its 29-year military presence in Lebanon in April last year and anti-Syrian politicians swept to victory in ensuing elections.
A U.N. commission investigating the assassination has implicated senior Lebanese and Syrian security officials.
The United Arab Emirates acknowledged on Tuesday that two of its pilots were killed when their military aggression plane crashed over Jawf province, a military official said
The official added that the aggressive crashed plane was an apache that was
Artillery of the army and popular shelled a gathering of Saudi-paid mercenaries in al-Moqadra area in Serwah district of Marib province, a military official said on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, dozens of Saudi-paid mercenaries were killed and others injured in Wadi al-Theek in the district, the official added.
The army and popular forces carried out on Monday unique military operations in Taiz province.
A military official said that a number of Saudi-paid mercenaries were killed at the hands of the army and popular forces in al-Jazami Hill in al-Kadaha area in al-Ma'afer district.
A Saudi aggression fighter jet targeted a citizen's car driving in Fara area of Kutaf district in Saada province overnight, killing the driver and injuring his friend, a security official said on Monday.
The army artillery and popular committees launched a fierce attack on Saudi-paid mercenaries' sites in Jawf province, a military official said on Monday.
The attack destroyed a military vehicle belonging to the mercenaries and killed all on board in Sabran area in khab and shaaf district.
Scores of Saudi enemy soldiers were killed and injured on Sunday when the army and popular forces repelled a Saudi military attempt to sneak into Shurfah site in the border province of Najran, a military official said.
The operation was accomplished successfully against the Saudi
The army and popular committees have killed a total of 18 Saudi-paid mercenaries in sniper operations over the past hours in the central province of Marib, a military official said on Sunday.
Ten mercenaries were killed in Nehm district and eight others were killed in Serwah district, said the official.
Saudi aggression warplanes have launched more than 49 airstrikes over the past hours on several residential areas across Yemen, a security official said on Sunday.
The airstrikes targeted the areas of Malahiz and Husama in Dhahir district, and areas Thuban, Masahif and Sdad in Bakim district of northern Saada province.