Michel Murr, Lebanon’s oldest member of parliament, died on Sunday from coronavirus-related complications. He was 89, Lebanon's National News Agency reported. <span>Murr, who was first elected as an MP in 1968, served for three decades in a row since 1992.</span> <span>After the end of the country’s civil war in the early 90s, he held several government posts while serving <span>as deputy prime minister from 1992 to 2000.</span></span> <span>Throughout his 60-year-long political career, </span><span>Murr was appointed to lead several ministries, including the interior, defence and telecom portfolios.</span> <span>In 2004, he was elected as deputy parliament speaker. He served in the post until the 2005 parliamentary elections, which followed the assassination of former prime minister Rafik Hariri, the business tycoon credited with rebuilding Beirut after the civil war.</span> <span>Hariri's assassination pressured Syria to withdraw its military forces from Lebanon after three decades of dominating the country’s political landscape. </span> <span>The Syrian military withdrawal paved the way for traditional Christian leaderships to dominate the domestic political landscape once again, denying </span><span>Murr, a Greek Orthodox, a role in the executive branch.</span> <span>His death brings the total number of lawmakers in Lebanon’s 128-member parliament to 119 after eight MPs resigned in August following the Beirut port explosion that killed more than 200 people.</span> <span>The </span><span>resigned</span><span> MPs said the blast, that involved the explosion of a large stockpile of chemicals that was kept at the port for more than six years, capped decades of corruption and negligence.</span> <span>Since then, Lebanon remains without a fully functioning Cabinet despite economic and financial crises.</span>