By Crispian Balmer , BEIRUT (Reuters) – A Lebanese Sunni preacher lead thousands of anti-government Shi’ite protesters in Friday prayers at a tent camp in central Beirut in a show of Muslim unity.
The opposition is escalating a protest campaign to topple the government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora despite fears of sectarian strife.Shi’ite Hezbollah one of the most powerful force in the opposition while Siniora is a Sunni and his main backer, parliamentary majority leader Saad al-Hariri, is also a Sunni.Preacher Fathi Yakan, who leads a small pro-opposition Sunni group, will lead the noon prayers. Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah urged supporters on Thursday to attend the sermon to display Muslim unity.
"There will not, will not, be fighting between Shi’ites and Sunnis in Lebanon," Nasrallah told tens of thousands of supporters in central Beirut via a live video link.Nasrallah vowed to pursue his demand for a government of national unity and told Siniora to agree swiftly or face the prospect of new opposition demands for a transitional administration leading to early parliamentary elections.
By DONNA ABU-NASR, Associated Press Writer , BEIRUT, Lebanon – Her voice brought together under one roof both supporters of the beleaguered government and opponents trying to topple it. Yet in this tense country, sharp disputes break out even at a performance by Fairouz, Lebanon’s premier diva and the star of a musical about a corrupt government. Last weekend’s three-night run of "Sah el-Nom," loosely translated as "A Good Night’s Sleep," was supposed to open an annual summer festival in the ancient city of Baalbek. Israel’s July-August offensive on Lebanon forced organizers to postpone until December, hoping that by then calm would prevail.But opening night coincided with a new crisis that many fear could tear apart the country
In a televised message to the nation on Thursday night, Prime Minister Fuad Saniora affirmed that his government
by Salim Yassine BEIRUT (AFP) – Lebanese leader Michel Aoun has vowed that the opposition will escalate its street protests if the Western-backed government fails to accept demands for a unity cabinet. "If the prime minister (Fuad Siniora) and his camp continue to monopolize power, there will be an escalation of popular pressure," Aoun, 71, told AFP in an interview Wednesday.
by Michel Toum, L
December 2006
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.
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.
Washington 


