By Yara Bayoumy, BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon’s police chief vowed on Saturday to confront those who "terrorize this nation" at a memorial service for a police intelligence officer killed in a car bomb attack the previous day. Captain Wisam Eid, who helped investigate assassinations in Lebanon, and his bodyguard were killed when a car bomb ripped through a Christian suburb of Beirut on Friday. Police said the death toll in the attack had risen to five, from four, and there were 42 wounded.
Eid’s assassination was the latest in a series of bombings and political killings over the past three years. The turmoil has fuelled the worst political crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. "They thought that with their crime, they can affect our commitment and will, but they are really delusional," said police chief Brigadier General Ashraf Rifi at the memorial service at the internal security forces’ headquarters in Beirut. "We pledge to you that the internal security forces will continue to confront those who wanted to terrorize this nation with their crimes … our decision is to … confront the empire of death and terrorism," Rifi said.
President Bush offered his condolences. "This bombing, the latest in a series of terrorist attacks targeting those who are working to secure Lebanon’s independence and sovereignty, is a part of the continuing assault on Lebanon’s institutions," Bush said in a statement.
Red Cross ambulances evacuated at least a dozen casualties, after a powerful explosion tore through rows of parked cars, near a major highway overpass, targeting a top Lebanese police investigator.Firefighters worked feverishly to douse the blazing wreckage of twisted automobiles, as thick plumes of acrid black smoke choked the air. Lebanese security officials say top police investigator Wissam Eid, the apparent target of the blast, died immediately.
BEIRUT, Lebanon
daily star BEIRUT: Several pro-government delegations visited Bkirki Thursday to express solidarity with Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Butros Sfeir after Marada Movement leader Suleiman Franjieh launched a verbal attack on the prelate. "Father forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing," Sfeir said Thursday in an apparent response to Wednesday’s attack on him by Franjieh.
Top leaders from Lebanon’s parliament majority and the opposition met for the first time in three months Thursday as part of efforts by the head of the Arab League to end Lebanon’s 15-month-old political crisis. Majority leader Saad Hariri and opposition leader Michel Aoun met Thursday at the parliament building in downtown Beirut. They were joined by Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa and former Lebanese President Amin Gemayel. Hariri and Aoun held several meetings last year, including one in Paris in October. The opposition recently named Aoun as its representative in any meetings with the majority – a move that was rejected by the anti-syrian group for weeks.
The U.S. State Department says a bomb blast that struck a U.S. Embassy vehicle in Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, has killed four people. Lebanese security officials put the death toll lower, at four. Speaking in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressed outrage at the blast and called it a terrorist attack. She said the U.S. will not be deterred in its efforts to help the Lebanese people and the democratic process in that country.
Nicholas Blanford in Beirut ,
Lebanon’s politicians on Sunday welcomed the decision by Arab nations, including Syria, to back the head of Lebanon’s army as the next president, expressing hope the move would help end the country’s political crisis. Arab foreign ministers issued the endorsement of Gen. Michel Suleiman on Saturday after meeting in the Egyptian capital of Cairo. The opposition requested that it receive representation in the governement porportionally to the distrubution of the parliamentr before allowing Suleiman to be elected.
naharnet, Hayek Projects a Little Bad News, a Lot of Good for 2008


