Lebanon hopes to lure tourists after bomb
BEIRUT (Reuters) – Beirut’s luxury hotels have patched up the damage from a huge bombing that plunged the country into turmoil and opened their doors again hoping to lure back tourists in time for the summer.
The Feb. 14 blast that killed former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri shattered the windows and blew in the doors of hotels lining the coast, forcing them to close for some two months.
Now that Syria has pulled its troops out of Lebanon after 29 years and the country is looking forward to May elections that had been threatened by political upheaval, hopes are high Arab visitors will return to their favorite regional destination.
The court also decided to delay a ruling in a 2003 case against Aoun, who is due to return to Beirut on Saturday, over comments that were deemed to have damaged Lebanon’s relations with Syria.
VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI has designated a cardinal to stand in for him at a beatification ceremony later this month in a shift from his predecessor who declared more “blesseds” and saints than all his predecessors over the past 500 years combined.
Court Clears Anti-Syrian Lebanese Official – Last Update






