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Hezbollah Fighters Leave Beirut Streets

AP
Posted: 2008-05-10 17:02:35
Filed Under: World News
BEIRUT, Lebanon (May 10) - Hezbollah gunmen were melting away from the streets of Beirut late Saturday, heeding an army call to clear out fighters after the Shiite militants demonstrated their military might in a power struggle with the U.S.-backed government.

Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, in his first public statement since sectarian clashes erupted on Wednesday, said Lebanon can no longer tolerate Hezbollah having weapons. He called on the army to restore law and order and remove gunmen from the streets.

Despite his tough talk, Saniora made a key concession to the Hezbollah-led opposition that would effectively shelve the two government decisions that sparked the fighting.

Muslim west Beirut was mostly calm a day after Hezbollah and its allies seized control of neighborhoods from Sunnis loyal to the government. Most Hezbollah gunmen had pulled out, leaving small bands of their Shiite Amal allies to patrol the streets.

While tensions in the capital appeared to be defusing, violence spread and intensified in other parts of the country.

At least 12 people were killed and 20 wounded when pro- and anti-government groups fought in a remote region of northern Lebanon, Lebanese security and hospital officials said. It was the heaviest toll for a single clash since fighting began.

At least 37 people have been killed in four days of clashes - the worst sectarian violence since Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war.

The violence grew out of a political standoff between the opposition, which pulled out of the Cabinet 17 months ago demanding veto power over government decisions. The deadlock has prevented parliament from electing a president, leaving the country without a head of state since November.

The political standoff turned into clashes after the government confronted Hezbollah earlier this week. It said it would sack the chief of airport security for alleged ties to Hezbollah and declared the groups private telephone network illegal and a threat to state security.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Thursday the decisions amounted to a declaration of war and he demanded they be revoked. His Shiite forces then overran large swaths of Muslim west Beirut.

The show of force added to jitters in the Middle East and the West over Iran's growing influence and its intentions in the region. The U.S. on Friday accused Hezbollah, aided by its "Iranian and Syrian sponsors" of trying to undermine Lebanon's sovereignty and democracy.

Saniora accused Hezbollah of staging a coup, besieging the capital and "poisoning" the dream of democracy in Lebanon.

"The government did not declare war against Hezbollah. Hezbollah declared the war and is waging it with the aim of changing the local, regional and international balance of powers," he said.

After Saniora's speech, the army called for gunmen to withdraw from the streets of Beirut and reopen blocked roads.

Seeking to stop the country's slide toward all-out chaos and sectarian strife, the military ordered army units "to continue to take measures on the ground to establish security and spread state authority and arrest the violators."

Saniora said he would leave it up to the army to resolve the confrontation that sparked the clashes over the airport security chief and the Hezbollah telephone network.

The army offered Hezbollah a compromise. It said the airport security chief would not be sacked and recommended to the government that it reverse the decision on the phone network.

But the compromise did not fully satisfy the opposition's demands that the government officially revoke the two decisions.

The army has largely stayed out of the fighting, fearing its forces could break apart on sectarian lines as they did during the civil war. But in the past 24 hours they deployed heavily in neighborhoods of west Beirut seized earlier by the Shiites, stationing armored personnel carriers and jeeps on street corners and putting up more checkpoints.

In some areas they protected besieged leaders of the pro-government factions, Sunni parliament majority leader Saad Hariri and his ally, Druse leader Walid Jumblatt.

The army command is respected by Hezbollah and an opposition statement said its forces will withdraw all their gunmen from Beirut in compliance with the army request.

The opposition said a "civil disobedience" campaign will continue until its demands are met.

Within minutes of announcing that Hezbollah fighters would withdraw from Beirut, opposition activists set tires ablaze in a downtown overpass and clashes were reported in the northern city of Tripoli.

The opposition statement did not say whether Hezbollah forces would remove roadblocks around Beirut including one cutting off access to the airport and shutting it down since Wednesday.

Government-allied Druse leader Jumblatt told reporters at a news conference he hoped the crisis was now over.

Jumblatt helped spark the tensions when he alleged Hezbollah had set up cameras near the airport - which is located in the Hezbollah stronghold of south Beirut - to monitor the movement of anti-Syrian Lebanese politicians and foreign dignitaries. He suggested Hezbollah was planning to bomb aircraft to assassinate such figures.

Asked if the government compromise on its decision to confront Hezbollah was a humiliating defeat, he replied: "It is not humiliating. ... If it is a question of preserving the peace, preventing civil strife, sectarian strife, it's not humiliating."

While Beirut settled into a tense calm, violence was intensifying in other parts of Lebanon.

Fighters loyal to Hariri and the government battled the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, a secular pro-Syrian group allied with Hezbollah. The clash broke out in the town of Halba in a remote Sunni region of northernmost Lebanon.

At least 12 gunmen were killed and 20 wounded, Lebanese security and hospital officials said.

The pro-government fighters stormed the office of the SSNP and set it ablaze after the gunbattle. Nine of the dead were SSNP and three were government loyalists, the security officials said.

The officials all spoke on customary condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

In a mountain town east of Beirut, Hezbollah accused a pro-government Druse group of kidnapping three of its members and shooting and stabbing two of them to death. Hezbollah said it held Jumblatt personally responsible for the safety of the third man.

Eight people were killed near the town of Aley late Friday in clashes between government supporters and opponents. Another civilian died in the clashes in the southern city of Sidon.

Earlier Saturday in Tarik Jadideh, a Sunni Muslim neighborhood of Beirut, a Shiite shop owner opened fire on Sunnis in a funeral procession as they passed his store chanting insults at Shiite Hezbollah leaders. He killed two and injured six, police and witnesses said.

An AP photographer who was covering the funeral said the attack came as the procession headed toward a nearby cemetery to bury a 24-year-old killed in this week's fighting.

After the attack, angry people stormed the alleged gunman's shop and set it ablaze. Troops captured the gunman.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2008-05-10 17:02:35
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Recent Comments

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60 comments

hazim58 08:58:53 AM May 12 2008

Iran and Syria are the problem and are destabilizing the entire region through their proxy fighters and organizations. Its time to drain the swamp and eliminate these repressive, tyrannical, insane, destabilizing regimes once and for all.

izsygrandpa 01:06:51 AM May 12 2008

Glad to see the 'peace-loving' Muslims at work in Lebanon.

adictgamer 12:01:20 AM May 12 2008

Islam extremists must be exterminated as one would kill termites in a house. Until such is done there will never be peace. It is not a pretty job and wont be popular but it is necessary for the continuation of the human race. They dont care if the world ends. Many people dont seem to have the ability to comprehend that, they would purposefully bring about the end of the world. Kill Hamas, Kill Al Queda, Take out Irans infrastructure... Or our granchildrends lives will be in question.

jeff1214 03:51:33 PM May 11 2008

Sorry manms but we can't make peace with the Islamofascists. I believe that in the Quran it says that it is perfectly okay to lie to the infidel. Look what is happening in the Muslim countries and any non Muslim country next to a Muslim country. Look at India now, and the division into two counties during the time of Gandhi. Look at Lebanon, Pakistan, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Iran, the Phillipines, Thailand, Spain, England, Israel, Chechniya. Every country next to a Muslim country is feeling the pressure of Islamofascism. Look at 911. Sorry manms but start to read the writing on the wall.

manms0808 03:20:36 PM May 11 2008

we are big enough to put aside the differences for PEACE

rabbit1151 03:10:02 PM May 11 2008

Hezbollah and Hamas? Terrorists and Shiite. Al Qiada? Terrorists and Sunni. Iraq, Arab; Iran, Persian. Have we got this straight yet?
1300 years ago, Muslims started killing Christians in the Middle East as they built an Islamic Empire. European Christians mounted the Crusades to take back the Holy Land. 1200 years ago, Shiites started killing Sunnis over who was the "right kind of Muslim." They're still killing one another over this issue today and they're still mad about the Crusades.
They don't care about democracy, freedom, a better life for their families. It's time to greenlight the Israelis to round 'em and kill them all. Otherwise, we'll have to.

manms0808 02:41:00 PM May 11 2008

moderate like i say they are pretty nasty we already know this

manms0808 02:39:08 PM May 11 2008

sorry we got an evil madman running around and his name is bush..soo i am a peaceful person like 99 percent of us who live here are .and ..just let me say we dont approve of a madman running our government ..i am the people of the U.S.and we (or I) will not never accept this..

manms0808 02:27:57 PM May 11 2008

anyway jeff i still dont believe you i think it is not just the point of inactive active or doing something ...it is alot worse than that the only thing dangerous is our own gov we already know hezbollah is evil and and that almedinajah is no saint either ...alhmedinajahd has never said it wants a bomb to hurt people...i still say iran is no threat to the U.S. as putin said your kidding right ?if you think iran would attack the U.S. the only bomb we have to worry about is the sizeable bomb that might hit us here

moderate2008 02:21:12 PM May 11 2008

manms do you know that syria and iran have been systimaticly assasinating lebanese leaders that are loyal to the goverment and reporters that have the most honrable reputations known in the arab world they want to silence the free voice the latest thing they did is bomb the future news chanel ,news paper and radio 2 days ago what does that tell you to you think about the asasination of JFK I hope that you have nothing against him it has been like that in lebanon over and over for the past 2 years it started with the bombing of rafik alhariri and went on and on and on so who is the victim

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