Khazen

Lebanese jitters silence renowned psychic

By Ayat Basma BEIRUT, Dec 30 (Reuters) – A year after he predicted a rash of political killings and upheaval, Lebanon’s most famous clairvoyant will not tell a jittery public what 2006 holds when he makes his usual end-year television appearance. Thousands of Lebanese tune in every New Year’s Eve to hear what Michel Hayek foresees, but the 38-year-old said he no longer wanted to be seen as the bearer of bad news.

"After all the clamour surrounding my 2005 predictions and the rumours that spread later in my name, I have decided not to announce my predictions for this year (2006)," Hayek told Reuters. "What has troubled me most are the rumours. I don’t want to be the reason people are afraid to go to the grocer or send their children to school." A rumour spread by mobile phone text messages and attributed to Hayek predicted mass bombings would tear apart central Beirut earlier this month. So scared were Lebanese, whose nerves have been worn by a string of such attacks, that many shunned Christmas shopping and Sunday strolls to stay home. Hayek denies saying "something weird" would happen downtown that weekend, but many felt his predictions for 2005 had proved so uncannily accurate that any rumour was too scary to ignore.

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Lebanon: Rockets aimed at Israel disarmed

Associated Press,  Army engineers in south Lebanon dismantled Friday two rockets mounted for firing at Israel, a senior military official said of a move that suggested Lebanon was exerting greater control over its border area. "The two rockets were found in an orchard in the border town of Naqoura," the official told the Associated Press, adding that the army was investigating who owned the rockets and had searched the area for more. The incident came three days after Lebanese-based guerrillas fired rockets into northern Israel, causing damage to the town of Kiryat Shmona and lightly injuring four people.

In a rare rebuke, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Fuad Saniora condemned the rocket attack and said his government would catch the perpetrators to make sure it did not happen again. Although it was not the first time that Lebanese soldiers had seized rockets in southern Lebanon, Friday’s dismantling suggested the army was being more vigilant following Saniora’s remarks. The jets also flew over a PFLP-GC base in Sultan Yacoub, a village about 5 kilometers (3 miles) from the Syrian border, security officials said.

 

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Hold the Champagne: Lebanon Is in No Mood to Party

By MICHAEL SLACKMAN, BEIRUT, Lebanon Dec. 29 – The roadblocks begin a few miles before Gen. Michel Aoun’s house on a plusvh green hillside dotted with expansive villas. First, two soldiers and concrete barriers stop traffic. Then a maze of concrete blocks slows cars to a crawl. Then three more soldiers. Then a gate, and more guards, and a metal detector. Cellphones are placed in a cabinet and, finally, there he is, General Aoun, leader of the largest Christian bloc in Parliament.

Clear across the city, out of town and up a winding mountain road, the country’s Druse leader, Walid Jumblatt, is holed up in a medieval castle, protected by soldiers, checkpoints, an army of his own men and a towering metal gate.In fact, most of Lebanon’s chief political and factional leaders are taking cover these days, rarely leaving their well-guarded compounds, fearful they will be killed.

"Nowadays it has become more risky," Mr. Jumblatt said when asked if he ever leaves his mountain fortress. "They have listening devices stronger than the Lebanese Army. They have infiltrated everything."

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LEBANON: Security tightened over New Year following threats

BEIRUT, 29 December (IRIN) – The Lebanese government has increased the presence of security personnel throughout the country ahead of New Year’s celebrations, following threats and a series of bomb attacks this year. "We have doubled our patrols," said an official from the Beirut police who wished to remain anonymous. "From 700 staff we went up to 1,400," he added. Temporary checkpoints have been installed throughout the capital and night and day patrols have been brought up from 8 to 25, with 311 officers patrolling at night.

In addition, five security officers are posted at the entrance of every mall. "The army has also posted troops at the entrance of several towns and in public places throughout the country," the police officer said. On 22 December, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora asked the defense and interior ministers to draft an emergency security plan ahead of the festive holidays. The move comes after journalist and MP Gebran Tueini was killed in a car bomb on 12 December. It was the fourth political killing in Lebanon this year, which started with the murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri on 14 February, followed by three anti-Syrian journalists and politicians.

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Israeli Air Strikes Target Palestinian Militants’ Base in Lebanon

Israeli warplanes have struck a Palestinian militant base in southern Lebanon. Two Palestinian were reportedly injured in the raid. The air strike followed a rocket attack against two Israeli towns near the Lebanese border. Israeli aircraft struck a base belonging to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command, a small pro-Syrian Palestinian militant group based in Naameh, about eight kilometers south of Beirut.

The strike followed a series of rocket attacks Tuesday night against the Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona and the nearby village of Shlomi. The area is a frequent target of rocket attacks from Lebanese territory. A spokesman for the Palestinian group targeted in Wednesday’s strike denied his group’s involvement in the rocket attacks. Most attacks against northern Israel are carried out by the Islamic militant group Hezbollah, but a Hezbollah spokesman also denied involvement in the latest rocket attacks.

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Lebanese personalities emphasize the distinguished ties with Syria

Lebanese Minister of Energy And Water, Mohammed Fneish, underlined Sunday importance of preserving "the distinguished relation with Syria .. To fortify Lebanon against foreign interventions and against the Israeli danger we must have good ties with Syria," Fneish said in political symposium in Shqra town, shorthorn Lebanon.

The minister stressed that those who want to create disagreement with Syria, they definitely want to weaken Lebanon.Head of al-Wafaa Bloc for the Lebanese Resistance at the Lebanese parliament Mohammed Raad called upon all political powers in Lebanon for a national dialogue including all on national issues on top of which are relation with Syria, preserving the resistance and its weapon as well, as revealing the truth about the crime that claimed the life of Lebanese ex-Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri. The Lebanese MP called all sides to take their stances and decisions away from the "illusions of international support and interference."

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Junblat asks Hizbullah to prove commitment to Lebanon

The Lebanese Druze leader and parliamentarian Walid Junblat launched an unprecedented criticism against the Lebanese Hizbullah party. During his meeting with a people delegation in his house in Mukhtara in Mount Lebanon, he called on Hizbullah to prove his commitment to Lebanon first ahead of his cling to the alliance with Syria," according to al-Jazeera satellite TV.

Junblat’s statement was made on the background of statements made on Saturday by the secretary general of the Lebanese Hizbullah party Sheikh Hassan nasrullah to al-Manar TV channel in which he said "to the one who want to take us to a war with Syria, we say that the first looser of this war is Lebanon." Worthy mentioning that relations between the two sides- on opposing sides concerning relations with Syria, remained steadfast until the assassination of Gebran Tueni when Junblat and Syria’s opponents accused Syria of being behind it.

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Arab League Leader Denies Initiative in Lebanon

By BENNY AVNI – Staff Reporter of the Sun, UNITED NATIONS – The Arab League’s secretary-general, Amre Moussa, tried recently to mediate between Syria and Lebanon, reportedly offering to end a Syrian assassination campaign against Lebanese journalists and politicians. Diplomats and editorialists in the region said over the weekend that the effort, which was perceived in Lebanon as an attempt to defend Syria, backfired and highlighted the league’s weaknesses.

Yesterday, Mr. Moussa officially denied ever relating a Syrian offer to end assassinations in Lebanon. Reports in the Lebanese press over the weekend were "completely unfounded," Mr. Moussa said in a statement, denying that upon arriving from Damascus in mid-December he relayed an offer that Syria would completely cease an assassination campaign if the Lebanese government ignores U.N. Security Council resolution 1559 and ends its support of the U.N. probe into the assassination of a former Lebanese prime minister, Rafik Hariri.

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Lebanon arrests Syrian over Beirut bombing

BEIRUT, Lebanon, Dec. 27 (UPI) — A Syrian national was arrested in Beirut on Tuesday in connection with the bombing that killed anti-Syrian journalist Gibran Tueni 15 days ago. Judicial sources said Abdul Qadir Abdul Qadir, who rents a plot of land near where Tueni was killed, was being questioned about phone calls he made […]

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