From
Lebanese Forces Official Website
2nd day of clashes in Lebanon
By The Associated Press
May 8, 2008 - 2:27:12 PM

Lebanese children run past a gunman from Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri's Amal movement as he takes position in Beirut's Corniche al- Mazraa district. (AFP/RAMZI HAIDAR)
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BEIRUT, Lebanon — Sectarian fighting spread through the streets
of Beirut on Thursday as Shiite Hezbollah supporters and the Lebanese
government’s Sunni backers battled with machine guns and
rocket-propelled grenades shortly after Hezbollah’s leader vowed to
fight any attempt to disarm his men.
The violence first erupted in
Muslim West Beirut, where masked gunmen on street corners opened fire
along Corniche Mazraa, a major thoroughfare that has become a
demarcation line between the two sides. There was also fighting in the
nearby Ras el-Nabeh area. There was no immediate word on casualties.
The
violence spread to Khandaq el-Ghamiq, a neighborhood adjacent to
downtown, which is home to the government’s offices. Shootings and
explosions were reported by witnesses and television stations in the
Aisha Bakkar neighborhood near the office of Lebanon’s Sunni spiritual
leader, who is allied with the government. Gunfire and explosions were
also heard in a nearby district where the opposition-aligned parliament
speaker has his official residence.
Troops in armored carriers had
earlier moved in to West Beirut to separate people who were trading
insults and throwing stones at each other, but the troops did not
attempt to stop the street battles that then broke out.
The army, which has been struggling to contain the disturbances, warned of the consequences to the country and the military.
“The
continuation of the situation as is is a clear loss for all and harms
the unity of the military institution,” a statement said.
The army
has largely stayed out of the broader political struggle between
Hezbollah and the government for fear of exacerbating the situation.
The army’s commander is the two factions’ consensus candidate for
president.
Gen. Michel Suleiman so far has advised the government not to declare a state of emergency.
The
tensions in Lebanon are partly fueled by the growing rivalry beween
Shiite Iran and Sunni Arab countries like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which
back the government.
Many worry that the conflict could push Lebanon
back toward the lawless days of its 1975-1990 civil war, when militias
ran entire neighboroods and battled over territory, religious or
political affiliation. The conflict left 150,000 dead and wrecked
entire areas of the capital.
The latest clashes came close on the
heels of a defiant speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who
said his Iranian-backed militant organization would respond with force
to any attacks.
“Those who try to arrest us, we will arrest them,”
he said. “Those who shoot at us, we will shoot at them. The hand raised
against us, we will cut it off.”
It was the second day of fighting
that has turned some city neighborhoods into battlegrounds and spilled
over to other parts of the country.
The violence appeared to begin
as a test of wills between political rivals who have been locked in a
17-month power struggle for control of the government. It now could be
degenerating into a wider and deadlier sectarian conflict, with the
Sunnis’ spiritual leader denouncing Hezbollah and appealing to a
largely Sunni Islamic world to intervene.
The rivals have failed to agree on electing a president, leaving the country without a head of state since November.
The
latest round of tensions was sparked by the government’s decision
earlier this week to confront Hezbollah by replacing the Beirut airport
security chief for alleged ties to the Shiite militants.
The government also declared Hezbollah’s private communications network to be illegal.
Hezbollah
and leaders of the 1.2-million-strong Shiite community, believed to be
Lebanon’s largest sect, rejected the decisions, and the airport
security chief kept his job.
Supporters of the Hezbollah-led
opposition blocked roads in the capital on Wednesday to enforce a
strike called by labor unions protesting the government’s economic
policies and demanding pay raises.
The strike quickly escalated into
street confrontations between supporters of the rival camps. About a
dozen people were injured, mostly by stones, but no deaths were
reported.
On Thursday, the violence spread outside the capital.
Sunnis and Shiites exchanged gunfire in the village of Saadnayel in the
eastern Bekaa Valley. Four people were injured, said security
officials, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with military
regulations.
The area is on a major crossroads linking the Shiite areas of Baalbek, a Hezbollah stronghold, with central Lebanon and Beirut.
Nasrallah
claimed Hezbollah’s secure network of primitive private land lines
helped the guerrillas fight Israel’s high-tech army in the 2006 summer
war.
He said the telecommunications network was “the most important
part of the weapons of the resistance” and added Hezbollah had a duty
to defend those weapons.
“The decision is tantamount to a
declaration of war ... on the resistance and its weapons in the
interest of America and Israel,” Nasrallah said.
Hezbollah supporters kept the road to the country’s only airport blocked, effectively closing the airport for a second day.
The clashes have brought back memories of the devastating 1975-1990 civil war that has left lasting scars on Lebanon.
Beirut residents are now seeing fresh demarcation lines, burning tires and roadblocks.
© Copyright 2008 by
Lebanese Forces Official Website
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