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French far-right leader Le Pen begins two-day Lebanon visit

Front National part leader and presidential candidate Marine Le Pen began a two-day visit to Lebanon by meeting with Lebanese President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Monday ahead of talks with business and religious leaders.

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French far-right leader and presidential hopeful Marine Le Pen on Monday met for the first time with a foreign head of state, holding talks with Lebanese President Michel Aoun in the capital of Beirut, reports FRANCE 24.

Le Pen, who is trying to establish international credentials as part of her current bid for the Elysée Palace, was also meeting business and religious leaders during the two-day visit to the Middle Eastern nation.

"We discussed the long and fruitful friendship between our two countries," the Front National (FN) leader said after meeting Aoun at the presidential palace in the hilltop suburb of Baabda.

She said they also discussed the refugee crisis in Lebanon, where more than one million war-weary Syrians have fled in recent years.

"We raised... the concerns we share over the very serious refugee crisis," she said. "These difficulties are being overcome by the courage and generosity of Lebanon but this cannot go on forever."

Opinion polls show that Le Pen is on pace to win the first round of France's presidential election on April 23rd, but that she will be beaten in the run-off ballot on May 7th.

The leader of the anti-immigration FN party also met Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a Sunni Muslim, who cautioned against associating his religion with jihadists who have repeatedly targeted France.

"The worst mistake would be the amalgam between Islam and Muslims on one hand and terrorism on the other hand," Hariri said, in a statement issued by his office.

"The Lebanese and Arabs, like the majority of the world, consider France to be the homeland of human rights and of the republican state that makes no ethnic, religious or class distinction between its citizens," he said.

On Tuesday, Le Pen is to meet Lebanon's grand mufti, the leader of its Sunni community, the Maronite Christian patriarch and rightist Christian party leader Samir Geagea.

France had mandate power over both Lebanon and Syria during the first half of the 20th century, and Jean-Marie Le Pen – Marine’s father - cultivated ties with Lebanese Christians for many years as head of the FN.

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.