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Massive crowd demands Lebanon Govt to quit
Middle East Desk Report
BEIRUT—Hundreds of thousands of Hezbollah-led protesters rallied on
Friday at the doorstep of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora to force the
resignation of his U.S.-backed government.
“We want a clean government,” one banner read. “Siniora out, we want a
free, free government,” the crowd chanted. Hezbollah, Lebanon’s most
powerful Shi’ite Muslim group, and its pro-Syrian allies had called on
Lebanese from across the country to take part in the protest in the
capital Beirut, to be followed by an indefinite sit-in near the
government offices.
Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, has branded the government
a U.S. puppet. “I call on the prime minister and his ministers to quit,”
Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun said to the cheers of protesters
in downtown Beirut. Speaking on behalf of the opposition, Aoun demanded
a national unity government.
A senior opposition source said opposition supporters were imposing an
open-ended blockade to the government offices where Siniora and most of
his ministers were holed up. “Tents are being put up for protesters to
encircle the government’s headquarters to stop movements to and from it
until Siniora falls,” the source said.
Large numbers of security forces, backed by armored troop carriers, were
deployed. Scores of soldiers, using barbed wire and metal barriers,
cordoned off the complex housing the government’s offices in downtown
Beirut.
Siniora and many ministers were inside while meters away, the crowds
massed, waving red-and-white Lebanese flags under banners demanding a
government of national unity.
Sources close to the organizers estimated the crowd at more than one
million, and Hezbollah deputy chief Sheikh Naim Kassem said before the
protests the campaign would continue until Siniora’s cabinet fell.
“This government will not take Lebanon to the abyss. We have several
steps if this government does not respond but I tell them you will not
be able to rule Lebanon with an American administration,” he told
Hezbollah’s al-Manar television.
Hezbollah has been at loggerheads with Siniora’s government over what it
says was its failure to back the group during the July-August war with
Israel.
“The government was negligent during the war. That’s why we want a
national unity government,” said resident Ali Aboud. “We’re here to
bring down the government. We, the resistance, don’t want any influence
from the United States,” opposition supporter Najwa Bouhamdan, 41, said.
Siniora said on Thursday his government would not quit. The anti-Syrian
politicians who control the cabinet say the Shi’ite Muslim group and its
allies want to stage a coup.
The government was weakened last month by the resignation of six
opposition ministers and the November 21 assassination of anti-Syrian
Christian cabinet minister Pierre Gemayel. His funeral drew tens of
thousands into central Beirut, with many mourners accusing Damascus of
being behind the killing.
Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, the most prominent anti-Syrian leader,
urged supporters to remain calm and avoid street confrontations. He said
Hezbollah wanted to instate Syrian and Iranian tutelage over the
country.
“Very calmly, we will remain steadfast,” he told a news conference on
Friday. “We will confront (the opposition) calmly. We will remain in our
houses and fly the Lebanese flags... We will wait for a month, for two
months... and watch them.”
Many Lebanese fear protests could turn violent. Tension between Sunnis
and Shi’ites is high, as is bad feeling between Christians who support
leaders allied to the rival camps.
The anti-Syrian camp accuses the opposition of aiming to bring down the
government to derail an international tribunal to try suspects in the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, whose killing in
2005 many blame on Damascus.
Many Lebanese fear protests could turn violent. Tension between Sunnis
and Shi’ites is high, as is bad feeling between Christians who support
leaders allied to the rival camps.
The anti-Syrian camp accuses the opposition of aiming to bring down the
government to derail an international tribunal to try suspects in the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, whose killing in
2005 many blame on Damascus.
Syria denied involvement but was forced to pull its troops out of
Lebanon in April 2005 by international pressure led by the United States
and France and huge anti-Syrian protests.
A U.N. inquiry has implicated Syrian and Lebanese security officials in
the killing. Siniora’s depleted cabinet approved U.N. plans last week
for the Hariri court. |