Khazen

Beirut Shooting Sparks Fear of Sectarian Clash

By Daniel Williams,  Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) — The shooting death of a Shiite Muslim youth in Beirut increases the risk of converting Lebanon’s political power struggle into a sectarian conflict. Portraits of Ali Ahmed Mahmoud, 20, who died during a Shiite-Sunni Muslim street fight yesterday, hung at downtown plazas occupied by Hezbollah, the Shiite party that is campaigning to topple Lebanon’s pro-Western government. Placards declared Mahmoud a martyr.

Army units appeared at intersections that separate Shiite and Sunni areas. A row of a dozen armored personnel vehicles topped with recoilless rifles lined a boulevard between KasKas, the scene of the killing, and the Shiite neighborhood of Dahiyeh. “We don’t know what is going to happen next,” said Hamed Jabasini, 40, a chocolate merchant. “This is something the leaders bring to us by their politics.”

The opposition protests, aimed at toppling Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, began Dec. 1 One of the main opposition is. Hezbollah’s militia triggered war with Israel in July when it abducted two Israeli soldiers. The party wants to get more say in government and divert Lebanon from close ties with the U.S. Iran and Syria back Hezbollah in this quest. The Bush administration supports Siniora and regards Hezbollah as a terrorist tool of the governments in Tehran and Damascus.

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Israel to withdraw its forces

AP, Dec 4, 2006 Nearly two months after the rest of its army left southern Lebanon, Israel agreed yesterday to pull its few dozen remaining soldiers from the Lebanese part of a village divided by the border, yielding control to U.N. peacekeepers. The move came as Israel’s Cabinet discussed the three-day-old siege of Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora’s government by pro-Hezbollah demonstrators in Beirut. Commentators here called the troop pullout a diplomatic gesture aimed at shoring up Siniora’s position, but some said it would be of little help.

Israeli officials are alarmed by the crisis in Lebanon, fearing that a collapse of the moderate regime could bring to power an Iranian proxy state on Israel’s northern border and lead to another war like the inconclusive 34-day conflict last summer with Hezbollah.


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EU’s Solana stresses support for Lebanon’s

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The European Union’s foreign policy chief said Monday he backed Lebanon’s embattled Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, who faces protests by supporters of the Hezbollah movement seeking to bring down the government.

"Prime Minister Saniora has done a good job," Javier Solana told reporters. "There is a constitutional government, which came from free elections and is behaving in our opinion in a very positive manner."

The standoff between Saniora and the Hezbollah-led opposition turned violent Sunday leaving a Shiite man dead from gunshot wounds and 21 others injured. Soldiers and police, backed by tanks and armored vehicles, surrounded government headquarters in a protective cordon.

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Pressure mounts in Lebanon

by Henri Mamarbachi, BEIRUT (AFP) – Tensions ran high in Lebanon after a Shiite was killed in a Beirut street fight near a mass rally against the Western-backed government, stoking fears of a descent into sectarian strife.

The killing in a pro-government neighborhood was the first violent incident since the launch of the open-ended protest on Friday, threatening to take an already heated cauldron of political division to boiling point.Hundreds of army troops were manning armored vehicles on every street corner of the district where the clashes erupted, while at the protest, Hezbollah’s civilian-clothed security men were maintaining a tight grip on the crowds."Arab countries cannot stand by and watch a situation that could get worse," said Arab League chief Amr Mussa after meeting President Emile Lahoud.

Hezbollah has spearheaded the protest against a government it accuses of being corrupt, weak and no longer representative of the Lebanese people after six pro-Syrian ministers resigned last month. Prime Minister Fuad Siniora’s government has dug in its heels, insisting that only talks, not protest, can solve Lebanon’s political crisis. But the opposition has vowed to continue the demonstration until the government falls

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Lebanon sends more army men to tense Beirut

By Nadim Ladki, Beirut – Lebanon’s army deployed more soldiers in Beirut on Monday after the killing of a demonstrator raised fears anti-government protests could turn into sectarian violence. Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa warned the crisis could worsen and indicated he had discussed ideas for a solution with Lebanese officials during a 24-hour visit to Beirut.

Security sources said the military increased its forces in Sunni districts that Shi’a protesters drive through to get to central Beirut where the Hezbollah-led opposition is holding a sit-in to try to topple the Western-backed government.These districts saw clashes between residents and protesters on Sunday – from stone-throwing to fights with knives.

In the most serious incident, gunmen fired assault rifles at a group of protesters in a Sunni neighbourhood, a stronghold for the anti-Syrian majority coalition, killing one man.The body of Ahmed Mahmoud was brought to the protest site, where thousands of anti-government demonstrators read Qur’anic verses over a coffin wrapped in a Lebanese flag.

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Pictures throughout the week

A Lebanese police officer stands guard in downtown Beirut in front of a Christmas tree and a poster of assasinated Lebanese industry minister Pierre Gemayel on 19 December 2006.

To view more pictures of the last week activities in Lebanon and Beirut, please click Read More (New pictures are added in a daily basis)

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Lebanese opposition launches major protests

BEIRUT – Hundreds of thousands of protesters from the Free Patriotic movement, Hizbullah and its opposition allies massed Friday in downtown Beirut seeking to force the resignation of Western-backed Prime Minister Fuad Siniora, who was holed up in his office ringed by hundreds of police and combat troops.  

 The oppositiom mobilized their bases for the protest, arranging to bus supporters from all over Lebanon and handing out free gasoline coupons to people in remote regions.The crowd, which the government estimated at 800,000, created a sea of Lebanese flags that blanketed downtown.Opposition officials put the number at 1 million and a half 

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