Khazen

Leader Vows to Tackle Lebanon Violence

By BASSEM MROUE, Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon – Following Lebanon’s third bombing in eight days, President Emile Lahoud pledged Sunday to fight the violence gripping his country since last month’s assassination of former premier Rafik Hariri.  Saturday’s blast at an industrial property in the mainly Christian northeastern suburb of Bouchrieh injured five people and set at least six factories ablaze. The attack followed bombings on March 19 and March 23 that targeted two Christian strongholds, killing three people and wounding at least 10. “We will do all we can. We should all be united because this is how we can save the country,” Lahoud, a Maronite Christian and close Syrian ally, vowed after attending Easter Mass.

Read more
Lebanon Explosion Said Caused by Bomb

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) – A loud explosion was heard in the Lebanese capital of Beirut on Saturday, and Arab TV stations cited security officials as saying it was caused by a bomb. There was no word on casualties.  The nature of the explosion was not immediately known, but witnesses said the blast, coming on the eve of the Easter holiday, occurred in the predominantly Christian northeastern Beirut suburb of Dekweneh. Other witnesses said the blast took place in the Bouchrieh-Dekweneh industrial zone area. Arab satellite stations Al-Arabiya and Al-Jazeera cited unidentified Lebanese security officials as saying the cause of the explosion was a bomb. Local LBC station said at least one building was on fire.

Read more
Lebanon agrees to Hariri inquiry

Lebanon has indicated it is prepared to co-operate with an international inquiry into last month’s killing of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. The move follows a UN report which described Lebanon’s own investigation into the bomb attack in Beirut as flawed and inconclusive. Lebanese authorities criticised the report’s findings, saying they were “alien to reality”. And they insisted that any inquiry would have to work with the government. At a press conference on Friday, Lebanese Foreign Minister Mahmoud Hammoud said the inquiry would be expected to work within an established framework “in co-operation with the state”.

Read more
U.N.: Lebanon’s Hariri Probe Unsatisfactory

By NICK WADHAMS, Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS – A U.N. report into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri concluded that Lebanon’s probe of the killing was riddled with flaws and an international investigation is needed.  The report, released Thursday, does not directly assign blame, saying the causes could not be determined. But it says Syrian military intelligence shares responsibility to the extent that it and Lebanese security services failed to provide “security, protection, law and order” in Lebanon. The report says there was a “distinct lack of commitment” by Lebanese authorities to investigate the crime, and the probe was not carried out “in accordance with acceptable international standards.”

Read more
Lebanese Defiant in Wake of Bombings

By BASSEM MROUE, Associated Press Writer JOUNIEH, Lebanon – Just hours after a bomb killed three people and heavily damaged a shopping mall in Lebanon’s Christian heartland, defiant residents unfurled a giant Lebanese flag on the wrecked building, and shop owners began working to reopen their stores. The Lebanese people will not kneel. An explosion causes damage but we will repair,” Raymond Muhanna said as he stood amid shattered glass in the electrical appliances shop where he works. “This will not destroy the Lebanese people.” Yet many Lebanese clearly are worried about where and when the next explosion will come

Read more
Bomb Kills Two in Christian Town (Kaslik Jounieh) in Lebanon


BEIRUT (AFP) – Two people were killed when a bomb ripped through a shopping center in a Christian area north of Beirut, the second explosion since the assassination last month of ex-premier Rafiq Hariri plunged Lebanon into political turmoil. Police confirmed that the blast, which occurred near the port of Jounieh 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of Beirut was caused by an explosive device. The dead were two foreigners, whose identity has yet to be confirmed, while three were wounded, police said Wednesday. The blast followed an explosion in another Christian district early Saturday, which injured 11 people, and seemed certain to heighten fears of a resurgence in the sectarian violence that devastated Lebanon during its 1975-1990 civil war.

Read more
Some want Christian exile back in Lebanon

Buoyed by their success in forcing Syria to withdraw some troops, elements of the Lebanese opposition have called for the return of two Christian leaders who played a major role in the country’s bloody civil war.Nematallah Abi Nasr, a Christian legislator, said Monday that he and some colleagues were working to secure the release from prison of Samir Geagea, who led the powerful Lebanese Forces militia during the 1975-90 war, and the return from exile in France of Gen. Michel Aoun, the former Lebanese army commander.Abi Nasr and five other opposition legislators – including a Sunni Muslim, a Shiite Muslim and a Druse – have signed a petition for a bill that would allow Geagea to receive amnesty.

Read more
Lebanon’s Pro-Syrian PM Insists on Unity Cabinet

By Lin Noueihed BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon’s pro-Syrian prime minister said on Monday he was determined to forge a national unity government, even though anti-Syrian opposition leaders have refused to join any lineup before general elections.  Political divisions deepened over the weekend when the opposition dismissed Syrian-backed President Emile Lahoud’s call for talks after a bomb wounded 11 people in a Beirut suburb, raising fresh fears of a return to Lebanon’s violent past. Opposition leaders instead urged Prime Minister Omar Karami, who resigned last month but was reappointed by parliament to form a new government, to make do without them and quickly pick a cabinet to lead Lebanon to elections due in May. he polls may have to be postponed if the political stalemate persists, but Karami stuck to his guns.

Read more
Sister of slain Lebanese PM Rafiq Hariri seen as carrying the torch

BEIRUT (AFP) – Bahia Hariri, sister of slain former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri, is increasingly seen as his possible political heiress, charged with carrying on a mission that has marked politics here for the past 15 years. Within hours Saturday of an explosion in a Christian neighborhood that injured 11 people, she was at the site of the blast to reassure residents, telling them not to afraid. “They (the perpetrators) won’t succeed in terrorizing us,” she declared. With mourning for her brother, killed in a bomb blast February 14, behind her, Bahia Hariri — a deputy from the southern city of Sidon — has also become more prominent in her pronouncements backing the Lebanese opposition.

Read more