Four killed in Lebanon sectarian gunbattles
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by Omar Ibrahim TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AFP) - Four people were killed and dozens wounded in street battles between rival sectarian camps armed with rockets, sniper rifles and grenades in the north Lebanese city of Tripoli on Wednesday.  Panicked residents were fleeing the scene of the fighting which first erupted late on Tuesday in two districts of northeastern Tripoli, while several roads were blocked and local shops and schools were closed, an AFP correspondent said. A security official said four people were killed and another 58 were wounded in the violence, which followed the eruption of similar battles two weeks ago in the port city that left nine people dead and dozens wounded. The latest fighting comes amid continued efforts by Prime Minister Fuad Siniora to form a national unity government which have been hampered by bickering between rival factions over cabinet posts. Fighting raged on a main road separating the areas of Bab al-Tebbaneh -- where most residents are Sunni supporters of the Western-backed premier -- and Jabal Mohsen, which is dominated by members of the Alawite community, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The two sides announced that they had agreed to observe a cease-fire from 8 p.m. and allow the deployment of the army in the two neighborhoods affected by the fighting.  "The army will deploy to maintain security and prevent any armed presence," said a statement released after indirect negotiations between the two sides held under the auspices of the Sunni mufti of North Lebanon, Sheikh Malek al-Shaar.  Later on Wednesday, the Lebanese Armed Forces warned gunmen on both sides that soldiers would fire on them if they were seen on the streets after 9 p.m., security officials said. The army was sending reinforcements to the area.  President Michel Suleiman and other officials have been consulting with Shaar, who has acted as a mediator between the two sides since the fighting broke out several weeks ago.  Panicked residents were fleeing the scene of the fighting which erupted again late on Tuesday in two districts of northeastern Tripoli, while several roads were blocked and local shops and schools were closed.

Television images showed masked gunmen running across deserted streets and smoke billowing out of nearby buildings as clashes continued intermittently throughout the day.

The security official told AFP that the dead included a Palestinian nurse gunned down by sniper fire, while the wounded included both Sunnis and Alawites.

The two sides announced that they had agreed to observe a ceasefire from 8 pm (1700 GMT) and allow the deployment of the army in the two neighbourhoods affected by the fighting.

"The army will deploy to maintain security and prevent any armed presence," said a statement released after indirect negotiations between the two sides held under the auspices of the Sunni mufti of north Lebanon, Sheikh Malek al-Shaar.

Sporadic fighting has erupted in Lebanon despite a powersharing deal between rival factions aimed at ending political crisis that boiled over into clashes that left 65 dead in May and raised fears of a return to all-out civil war.

The AFP correspondent said some people were wounded by sniper fire as they were trying to escape the violence.

Witnesses also said some people who were wounded in overnight clashes could not be taken to hospital because of the intensity of the fighting.

Main roads in the area have been blocked, including the motorway that connects Tripoli to the Syrian border, the correspondent said, while local schools and businesses were shut down.

Siniora, a Sunni Muslim, has been struggling to form a new government despite a May 21 powersharing deal hammered out in Doha between the ruling majority and opposition close to Hezbollah.

He said on Tuesday that he hoped a cabinet could be formed by the time President Michel Sleiman heads to Paris for a Mediterranean summit opening on Sunday.

The Doha accord allocated 16 cabinet seats to the parliamentary majority and 11 to the opposition, while Sleiman is to name three ministers.

BEIRUT: Former Interior Minister and leader of the Marada Movement Sleiman Franjieh called on the Lebanese Army Wednesday to fulfill its duty in calming the violence raging in Tripoli, and "not to remain still or neutral." Franjieh also said that nominating Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea to become justice minister is the same as nominating Al-Qaeda-inspired Fatah al-Islam leader and fugitive terrorist Shaker al-Abssi to the same post. Franjieh added that some judges would possibly resign from office "if someone who was once sentenced to death becomes a minister." He also hailed the prisoner swap deal between Israel and Hizbullah, saying that it proves "the resistance as more effective than diplomacy." "Without the resistance, no one would have been able to liberate the Lebanese detainees [in Israeli prisons]," the former minister said. - The Daily Star