designate Saad Al-Hariri handed the president his proposed line-up for a national unity government Monday in a move swiftly rejected by opposition factions including the powerful Hezbollah. Hariri was designated prime minister in late June but has yet to reach agreement with the opposition on the new unity government set to include Hezbollah and its allies. President Michel Suleiman, who took office last year as a consensus candidate, is not expected to approve any Cabinet proposal that does not have opposition support. “The president informed me that he would study the formation,” Hariri said after meeting Suleiman, who has said he wants the government to be formed before he travels to the UN General Assembly later this month. A senior opposition source told Reuters: “We will not deal with this proposal because we know nothing about it. As far as we are concerned, it does not exist and we will have nothing to do with it.” The rival factions have agreed on the broad division of seats in the new Cabinet. But Hariri, son of assassinated former prime minister Rafik Al-Hariri, has struggled to reach agreement with opposition politicians on the details. At the heart of the dispute are the demands of Christian leader Michel Aoun, an ally of Hezbollah. Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement holds more seats in the Parliament than any other Christian party. Hariri, leader of an alliance that won a June 7 parliamentary election, has resisted Aoun's demand for Gebran Bassil, his son-in-law, to keep his post as telecoms minister. Aoun also wants to name the new interior minister. The line-up proposed by Hariri on Monday kept Ziad Baroud in his current post as interior minister and handed the telecoms ministry to a figure close to the prime minister-designate, political sources said.