Michel Murr (, 29 September 1931 – 31 January 2021) was a Lebanon politician and businessman. He served as member of parliament, deputy prime minister and interior minister and was a prominent lawmaker in the northern Matn District region.
He studied engineering at St Joseph University and graduated in 1955. He later studied law at the University of Paris II Panthéon-Assas and graduated in 1958.
After the 1975–76 civil war, he supported the Kataeb Party Kataeb Regulatory Forces (KRF) militia and its successor, the Lebanese Forces (LF) led by Bashir Gemayel, but not its "Arabist" camp, along with Karim Pakradouni. In the mid-1980s, he supported the pro-Syrian LF faction of Elie Hobeika and participated in the negotiation of the Tripartite Accord, an agreement signed by Hobeika, Druze chieftain Walid Jumblatt and Amal leader Nabih Berri that would have legalized the Syrian presence in Lebanon. Hobeika and Murr were subsequently ousted from the LF leadership by Samir Geagea. They spent the rest of the war years in Syrian-controlled Zahlé, waiting for the day when Damascus would complete its occupation of Lebanon.
In 1979, he held the position of minister of post and housing in Selim Hoss's government and then became the minister of telegraph, post and telephone in the government of Shafik Wazzan in 1980.
Following Syria's takeover of Beirut in October 1990, he was rewarded for his loyalty to the Syrians and assumed the post of interior minister. He was defense minister from December 1990 to October 1992. On 20 March 1991, he survived an assassination attempt, when a car bomb detonated near his motorcade in Antelias, killing eight people and wounding 35 others.
Then he also served as deputy prime minister. When he was in office, he openly cooperated with the Syrian authorities. Murr was appointed interior minister in the 1996 Rafic Hariri cabinetMiddle East International No 538, 22 November 1996; Publishers Lord Mayhew, Dennis Walters; George Trendle p.14 and kept the post in the 1998 Salim Hoss government. Murr continued to serve in this post until 2000 when his son Elias Murr replaced him. Before the general elections of 2000, the Metn District was designed by Syrian and Lebanese authorities to facilitate Murr's election victory. In October 2004, he was elected as deputy speaker of parliament. In the 2005 elections, he was a member of the Change and Reform bloc led by Michel Aoun, but he later left the bloc to become an independent member.
He was the leader of the Metn Bloc that is an independent political party. He last won a seat in the parliament in the 2018 Lebanese general election.
Political career
Personal life
Death
See also
External links
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