Khazen

BEIRUT (AFP) - The pro-Syrian Hezbollah coalition scored a landslide win in round two of Lebanon's elections and claimed a clear mandate for anti-Israel guerrillas to keep their weapons in defiance of international calls for disarmament. The mighty Shiite Muslim Hezbollah and the rival movement Amal, campaigning on a pledge to keep on with the armed resistance against Israel, won all 23 seats in southern Lebanon, Interior Minister Hassan Sabaa said Monday. In the first elections to be held since Syria was forced by intense global pressure to end its 29-year military presence in Lebanon in April, the two groups maintained their grip on the volatile southern region still intermittently rocked by border clashes with Israel.

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Voters go to the polls in south Lebanon on Sunday in the second phase of parliamentary elections with the country rattled by the assassination of a prominent anti-Syrian journalist. A slate led by Syria's allies Hizbollah and Amal groups looks assured of victory in the Shi'ite Muslim heartland bordering Israel but the killing of columnist Samir Kassir on Thursday has again raised the stakes at the polls.The disparate anti-Syrian opposition put some of its differences aside to join voices in blaming Syria and its security allies for the killing and called for the resignation of President Emile Lahoud, a close ally of Damascus.Several opposition figures said his resignation would be the new parliament's main task after the May 29-June 19 elections. The opposition called on Friday for a gathering at a crossroads leading to Lahoud's presidential palace on Monday "to declare the responsibility of the chief of the Lebanese-Syrian security regime for the series of assassinations."

A prominent Lebanese journalist was today assassinated when a bomb exploded in his car, police said. Officers said Samir Kassir was killed when a device left under the driver's seat exploded. He was a columnist for An-Nahar, a leading newspaper frequently critical of Syria and the former Lebanese government that was allied with Damascus. The explosion, which happened in the Christian Ashrafieh neighbourhood of Beirut this morning, set the car on fire. Mr Lahoud's spokesman, Rafik Shalala, described the murder as a "grave incident", and said the president had ordered an investigation. "It's better not to make accusations until the circumstances are uncovered," he told the al-Arabiya television channel. To view pictures pls click read more.

 

Arms challenge awaits Hizbollah after Lebanon poll

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah is arguably Lebanon's most powerful leader and the prowess of his Hizbollah fighters gives him prestige far beyond its borders.

He has nothing to fear when Lebanon's phased parliamentary polls move south on Sunday, with victory assured for Hizbollah in alliance with Amal, the other main pro-Syrian group in the Shi'ite Muslim heartlands bordering Israel.

The Amal-Hizbollah "steamroller" is set to sweep the region's 23 seats in the second stage of elections that began in mainly Sunni Muslim Beirut last Sunday with a landslide win for the son of assassinated former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri.

But Nasrallah will need all his political skill to deal with changes in Lebanon now that Syrian troops are gone and to fend off U.S.-led pressure on Hizbollah to abandon its weapons.

Khazen History

Historical Feature:
Churches and Monasteries of the Khazen family