BEIRUT - Former Lebanon warlord Samir  Geagea, a staunch opponent of Syria and the Shiite movement Hezbollah,  will stand for the presidency in May, his Christian Lebanese Forces  party said on Friday.
Geagea, 61, was the only leader  from the 1975-1990 civil war ever jailed, but was released under an  amnesty in 2005 after Syria withdrew from Lebanon, ending 30 years of  domination over its tiny neighbour.
Syria ended its  military and political dominance under popular Lebanese and  international pressure, but it continues to exert significant influence  through allies, mainly Hezbollah.
Geagea is one of  Hezbollah's key opponents in Lebanon, and has repeatedly demanded that  the movement, which never disarmed after the 15-year civil war, hand in  its weapons.
He has also expressed support for the  revolt against President Bashar al-Assad and denounced Hezbollah's  involvement in the deadly conflict, which is now in its fourth year.
Last  month, Geagea's Lebanese Forces refused to join a new government  finally formed after 10 months of political wrangling, citing  Hezbollah's involvement in Syria and its controversial arsenal.
Lebanese  Forces deputy Georges Edwan announced Geagea's candidacy, saying the  party's decision to back him is based on an "urgent need for radical  change now".
The war in Syria has exacerbated sectarian tensions in Lebanon as the conflict has spilled over into the Mediterranean country.
Hundreds  of people have been killed over the past three years in clashes and  bombings, including a recent spate of car bomb attacks targeting mostly  Hezbollah strongholds.
The situation has been further  strained as the number of refugees from Syria has hit the one million  mark in Lebanon, a country of fragile resources and a native population  of just four million.
Geagea hopes to take over from  President Michel Sleiman whose six-year term ends on May 25 and who was  the first head of state voted in after Syria withdrew in 2005.
Under the constitution, parliament chooses a president within a two-month period before the end of the incumbent's term.
Lebanese  media have in recent weeks identified other presidential hopefuls as  ex-president Amin Gemayel, MPs Boutros Harb and Robert Ghanem, who are  like Geagea members of the March 14 anti-Syria movement.
Other  potential candidates are Hezbollah allies Michel Aoun, a Christian  leader and former army chief, and MP Suleiman Frangiyeh.
Lebanese presidents are always chosen from the Christian Maronite community.
Geagea spent 11 years in jail before being released in July 2005.
He  was arrested in 1994 in connection with a deadly bomb attack on a  church. He was cleared in that case but handed four death sentences  which were later commuted to life imprisonment for offences committed  during the civil war which killed some 150,000 people.
 
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