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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon: Jreissati Calls on STL President to Speed Up Trials
2018-04-19
[AAWSAT] Lebanese Justice Minister Salim Jreissati called on the Special Tribunal for Leb (STL) to accelerate its work in order to reach the truth about former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri’s liquidation.

Jreissati met on Tuesday with the STL president, Ivana Hrdličková, who was heading a judicial and administrative delegation from the tribunal.

According to available information, STL Prosecutor Norman Farrell filed a new indictment for the crimes against Georges Hawi, Marwan Hamadeh and Elias al-Murr. Farrell reportedly accused new Hezbollah officials, other than the five members of the party, who are being tried in absentia for the liquidation of Hariri.

"Time is gold and the Tribunal has got to move forward; its harmonious work must prevail; which does not seem imminent," Jreissati said following the meeting.

The justice minister, on the other hand, stressed that the meeting with Hrdličková was very productive, highlighting strong cooperation between the STL and the Lebanese government.

Last month, the Registrar of the STL, Daryl Mundis met with Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri
Second son of Rafik Hariri, the Leb PM who was assassinated in 2005. He has was prime minister in his own right from 2009 through early 2011. He was born in Riyadh to an Iraqi mother and graduated from Georgetown University. He managed his father's business interests in Riyadh until his father's assassination. When his father died he inherited a fortune of some $4.1 billion, which won't do him much good if Hizbullah
...Party of God, a Leb militia inspired, founded, funded and directed by Iran. Hizbullah refers to itself as The Resistance and purports to defend Leb against Israel, with whom it has started and lost one disastrous war to date, though it did claim victory...
has him bumped off, too.

during a working visit to Beirut and discussed various matters related to the work of the Tribunal.

He also met with the Prosecutor General Samir Hammoud and members of the diplomatic community in Leb.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hamadeh Hits Back at Aoun, Says His Ministers Hired 'Hizbullah Cronies' at Telecom Ministry
2013-09-18
[An Nahar] MP Marwan Hamadeh on Tuesday snapped back at Free Patriotic Movement
Despite its name a Christian party allied with Hizbullah, neither free nor particularly patriotic...
leader MP Michel Aoun
...a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hizbullah...
over remarks related to Hizbullah's controversial telecom grid in Zahle, accusing ministers loyal to Aoun of employing "Hizbullah cronies" at the Ministry of Telecommunications.

Aoun "protected Hizbullah's May 2008 coup against the Lebanese government, which tried back then to prevent Hizbullah from installing its illegal telecom network," Hamadeh said, noting that the party "invaded the capital Beirut and attacked Mount Leb" to thwart the government's efforts.

Hamadeh reminded the FPM leader that former telecom "minister Jebran Bassil was the one who assumed the telecom ministry portfolio after the Doha settlement which followed the May coup, and it was him and the minister who succeeded him (Nicolas Sehnaoui) who brought Hizbullah cronies to the heart of the telecom ministry and technically abolished the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority."

The MP, who served as telecom minister in Fouad Saniora's cabinet, hailed "the residents, MPs and dignitaries of Zahle for their steadfastness" and lauded the municipality and residents of the Bekaa town of Tarshish, where a similar confrontation over Hizbullah's grid had taken place in the past.

Hamadeh called on the military and security institutions to "draw lessons from the vigor of the Lebanese public opinion and prevent any May 7-like coup."

Earlier on Tuesday, Aoun said: "Whoever allowed Hizbullah to expand its telecommunications network in the Bekaa town of Zahle must resolve this issue to prevent unrest similar to that of May 7, 2008."

"What did former Premier Fouad Saniora and then Ministers Marwan Hamadeh and Elias al-Murr do on May 5 and 7, 2008?" he asked.

Gunmen belonging to Hizbullah and its allies swept through Beirut's neighborhoods on May 7, 2008 after the government of then PM Saniora tried to dismantle the group's telecommunications network, which Hizbullah says is for purely military purposes related to its conflict with Israel.

The fighting that left scores dead brought the country to the brink of a new civil war.

Tensions were running high in Zahle after members of Hizbullah attempted to expand the party's telecommunications network in the area on Sunday evening.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Aoun: Expansion of Hizbullah Network in Zahle Must Be Resolved to Avert Another 'May 7'
2013-09-18
[An Nahar] Free Patriotic Movement
Despite its name a Christian party allied with Hizbullah, neither free nor particularly patriotic...
leader MP Michel Aoun
...a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hizbullah...
stated on Tuesday that Hizbullah's expansion of its telecommunications network can be attributed to the failure to address this issue back in 2008 when this case first arose.

He said after the Change and Reform bloc's weekly meeting: "Whoever allowed Hizbullah to expand its telecommunications network in the Bekaa town of Zahle must resolve this issue to prevent unrest similar to that of May 7, 2008."

"What did former Premier Fouad Saniora and then Ministers Marwan Hamadeh and Elias al-Murr do on May 5 and 7, 2008?" he asked.

"We did not allow the establishment of this network and I cannot resolve problems that emerged in the 1990s," he declared.

Asked what the residents of Zahle should do to confront Hizbullah's actions, Aoun replied: "Let them block roads."

Commenting on stalled efforts to exploit Leb's offshore oil and gas wealth, he remarked: "It seems that there is a conspiracy to prevent the country from exploiting this wealth.

"We all know who is responsible for calling the government to convene," he added.

"It would be a disaster if we fail to exploit our oil wealth. It would be a shame if this wealth is not exploited due to some official's negligence," the MP noted.

Gunmen belonging to Hizbullah and its allies swept through Beirut's neighborhoods on May 7, 2008 after the government of then PM Saniora tried to dismantle the group's telecommunications network.

The fighting that left scores dead brought the country to the brink of a new civil war.

Tensions were running high in Zahle after members of Hizbullah attempted to expand the party's telecommunications network in the area on Sunday evening.

Residents of the city protested the move and temporarily blocked the road in the area.

The army soon intervened and set up checkpoints in the industrial zone and security forces deployed patrols in the city, which led to Hizbullah's withdrawal from the area.

There was an uproar in October 2011 when Hizbullah allegedly attempted to expand its telecommunications network in the Tarshish region on the outskirts of Zahle.

The residents thwarted the attempts and Telecommunications Ministry at the time denied any party actions in the region.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
At Least 18 Lebanese Figures Face Assassination Threat
2012-10-26
Several Lebanese figures are targets of possible liquidations, reported al-Joumhouria newspaper on Thursday.

A widely informed western diplomatic source told the daily that at least 18 Lebanese officials are being monitored, urging them to take the greatest precautions to protect themselves.

It explained that these figures not only include prominent officials, but others that do not enjoy as much influence and media exposure.

He said that the targets include Lebanese Forces
A Christian political party founded by Bashir Gemayel, who was then bumped off when he was elected president of Leb...
leader Samir Geagea
... Geagea was imprisoned by the Syrians and their puppets for 11 years in a dungeon in the third basement level of the Lebanese Ministry of Defense. He was released after the Cedar Revolution in 2005 ...
, head of the Mustaqbal
... the Future Movement, political party led by Saad Hariri...
parliamentary bloc MP Fouad Saniora, former Defense Minister Elias al-Murr, Internal Security Forces chief Ashraf Rifi, MP Butros Harb and a number of Mustaqbal politicians, most notably the Sunni ones and former MP Fares Soaid.

In addition, said the source, every potential presidential candidate from the March 14 camp who enjoys strong popular support is also an liquidation target.

The source revealed that it had relayed this information to one of Leb's politicians, requesting that it in turn be relayed to the potential targets in order for them to take the necessary precautions.

It warned that the assassins may resort to new murder techniques that had not been adopted before, such as booby-trapping an elevator as had happened in the failed liquidation attempt against Harb in July.

Internal Security Forces Intelligence Bureau head Brigadier General Wissam al-Hasan was killed in a car boom on Friday, raising fears that the phase of liquidations in Leb had returned.

The March 14-led opposition and Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Wally Jumblat
... Druze politician, head of the Progressive Socialist Party, who's been on every side in Leb at least four times. He'll sell you his friends for a dollar, but family comes higher because of shipping and handling...
blamed Syria for Hasan's crime.

Geagea was the victim of a failed attempt
Curses! Foiled again!
on his life in April and Murr was the victim of a failed attempt in July 2005.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
STL Establishes Jurisdiction over Hamadeh, Murr, Hawi Attacks
2011-08-20
[An Nahar] The Special Tribunal for Leb has established jurisdiction over three attacks relating to former ministers Marwan Hamadeh and Elias al-Murr and former head of the Lebanese Communist Party George Hawi, said the STL in a blurb.

Pre-Trial Judge Daniel Fransen has also ordered that the Lebanese authorities provide the relevant files to the Prosecutor, it added.

On June 30, 2011, Fransen received a request from the Office of the Prosecutor to determine whether or not these cases are connected to the February 14, 2005 liquidation of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, it continued.

Fransen ruled confidentially on August 5 that the Prosecutor had presented prima facie evidence that each of the three cases are connected, and are thus within the Tribunal's jurisdiction, explained the statement.

"Fransen has today issued three deferral orders requesting the Lebanese judiciary to comply within the next 14 working days," it said.

"The Pre-Trial Judge authorizes the Prosecution to share his confidential decision on the connected cases with the Lebanese authorities," it continued.

The decision on connectedness otherwise remains confidential so as not to compromise the investigation, and to protect the victims and potential witnesses.

"According to the Tribunal's Statute, a case is connected to the February 14, 2005 attack if it is of a 'similar nature and gravity' and has a number of elements in common with it, such as 'the criminal intent (motive), purpose behind the attacks, the nature of the victims targeted, the pattern of the attacks (modus operandi) and the perpetrators'," explained the STL statement.

"According to Article 1 of the Statute, the Tribunal has jurisdiction over attacks that occurred in Leb between October 1, 2004 and December 12, 2005 but only if their connectedness to the Hariri attack is determined by the Pre-Trial Judge," it added.

"While the Pre-Trial Judge's rulings do not mean that an indictment will necessarily be issued by the Prosecution, it allows them to continue investigating these cases," it said.

"It is for the Prosecutor to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to support an indictment in any of these three connected cases," concluded the statement.

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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Suleiman Receives Message from Obama and Confirmation of Ongoing Military Support
2010-11-21
[An Nahar] President Michel Suleiman received on Friday a written letter from his American counterpart Barack B.O. Obama congratulating him on Leb's Independence Day.

The message was delivered to him on Friday by General James Mattis, the U.S. Central Command chief, during a meeting that included U.S. Ambassador to Leb Maura Connelly.

Mattis had pledged on Friday that his country would continue to support the Lebanese army, a week after Washington lifted a freeze on military aid to Beirut.

"General Mattis came to Leb to reiterate ... the U.S. government's position that the United States is committed to the continuity of (the Central Command's) relationship with the Lebanese army and to supporting legitimate institutions of the Lebanese state," the U.S. Embassy said.

The general "pledged to continue to support training and engagement assistance to the Lebanese army in order to build greater military capacity and deepen our relationship," it said in a statement.

"The U.S. believes its assistance to the LAF (Lebanese armed forces) contributes to improving regional stability."

Mattis arrived on Friday for a brief visit, his first to Leb, during which he met President Suleiman, Defense Minister Elias al-Murr and Lebanese army chief General Jean Qahwaji.

The chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Howard Berman, last week lifted a hold on 100 million dollars in military aid to Leb.

The United States has provided 720 million dollars in aid to the Lebanese army since 2005.

But U.S. aid to Leb's military was suspended following a deadly skirmish between the Lebanese and Israeli armies in August.

Berman said he had received assurances that assistance to the Lebanese army had not fallen into the hands of Hizbullah, which fought a devastating war against Israel in 2006.

But he expressed ongoing concern over tensions between Leb and Israel in the wake of the 2006 conflict.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon sets up fund to equip army
2010-08-15
[Al Arabiya Latest] Lebanon said on Saturday it was setting up a fund for Lebanese to help arm its under-equipped military, days after lawmakers in Washington blocked U.S. military aid.

"I announce the launching of a fund to support and equip the army," the official news agency NNA quoted Elias Murr as saying.

Defense Minister Elias al-Murr said the fund hoped to attract donations from the millions of Lebanese living abroad as well as local residents. Murr said he was making the first contribution, of 1.0 billion Lebanese pounds ($670,000).

Two Democrat lawmakers have said they were holding up a $100 million approved package of U.S. military aid to Lebanon over concerns that the army was working closely with Hezbollah. The move came after a deadly cross-border clash between Lebanese and Israeli troops last week.

Murr has criticized the announcement, saying that any party that wished to help the military had to do so without conditions.

He said on Saturday the new fund was part of an initiative launched by Lebanese President Michel Suleiman to build up the army.

A week ago, following the August 3 border clash with Israel in which four people were killed, Michel Sleiman announced he had "launched a national, Arab and international campaign" to equip the army.

His statement called on "neighboring and friendly states to supply all kinds of arms" to allow him to defend the country.

Suleiman's announcement prompted Iran's ambassador to Lebanon to offer Iran's support to the military.

The U.S. State Department said the statement by Iran, which is likely to alarm Western countries who fear Tehran is increasing its influence near Israel's northern border, demonstrated the need for continued U.S. support to Lebanon.

The Lebanese military has an ill-equipped 60,000-strong army, outdated weapons and no air power.

Also, the United States has provided more than $720 million in assistance to the army since 2006 to Lebanon.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
US can keep 'conditional' aid: Lebanon minister
2010-08-12
[Al Arabiya Latest] Lebanon criticized on Wednesday moves by U.S. lawmakers to block aid for the military over concerns it was working closely with militant Shiite Hezbollah, after a deadly cross-border clash between Lebanon and Israel.

Defense Minister Elias al-Murr told reporters any party that wished to help the military had to do so without conditions.

"That person who said in Congress, 'I will stop aid to the army', he is free to do so ... Anyone who wants to help the army without restrictions or conditions, is welcome," Murr said.

"This person wants to make military aid conditional on not protecting (Lebanon's) land, people and borders against Israeli aggression. Let them keep their money or give it to Israel. We will confront (Israel) with the capabilities we own."

Israel complained to the United States and France about funds to the Lebanese army after a skirmish killed a senior Israeli officer, two Lebanese soldiers and a Lebanese journalist in the worst border violence since a 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman launched an initiative to build up the underequipped army, prompting Iran, which supports Lebanon's militant Shiite group Hezbollah, to offer support.

The U.S. State Department said the statement by Iran, which is likely to alarm Western countries who fear Tehran is increasing its influence near Israel's northern border, demonstrated the need for continued U.S. support to Lebanon.

The United States has provided more than $720 million in assistance to the army since 2006 to Lebanon.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hariri case complex: UN Lebanon tribunal chief
2010-02-06
[Al Arabiya Latest] The head of a United Nations probe into the murder five years ago of Lebanon's former prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri said on Friday there were "no deadlines" in issuing indictments in the case, calling it highly complex.

"All acts of terrorism are much more complicated than war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide," Antonio Cassese of the U.N.-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon told AFP during his first visit to Beirut.

"We cannot set deadlines," he added.

Cassese, who arrived in Lebanon on Monday on a week-long visit, said that unlike other crimes, political assassinations were harder to crack given the layers of secrecy involved.

"Terrorist acts involve secret cells. There's no clear chain of command or hierarchy," he said. "Most of the time those involved will not confess because they risk being killed by their accomplices."

Cassese and his deputy, Ralph Riachy, briefed senior officials including President Michel Suleiman on the tribunal's progress during their visit.

They did not meet Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, son of the murdered prime minister, or Defense Minister Elias al-Murr "because of the personal link they have with cases that may fall under the tribunal's jurisdiction," Cassese's office said in a statement before his visit.

Murr was also a minister in Rafiq Hariri's cabinet.

The Hague-based tribunal was set up by a U.N. Security Council resolution in 2007 to try suspects in the murder of Hariri, killed in a massive bomb blast on Beirut seafront in February 2005.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
How far will US support for Lebanon go?
2009-05-23
Opinion piece by the BBC mistakenly labeled as 'news' ...
The last time a US vice-president came to Beirut was in 1983, when George Bush Senior flew hurriedly in following a suicide truck bomb attack which blew up a US marine barracks, killing more than 240 soldiers. That, and a similar demolition of the US embassy in Beirut, persuaded President Ronald Reagan to pull the marines out of Lebanon, a humiliating retreat in the face of local forces backed by Syria and Iran.
You know, I get really tired of reading that "humiliating defeat" stuff. We were in Leb at the time under UN auspices, something we should be bringing up every time somebody suggests we try it again. We and the Frenchies were the bulk of the Multinational Force positioned between the Israelis, who'd just chased the PLO out of the country, and the Leb militias. As our guys were being blown up, it turned out that there was no "mandate" to hunt down and kill the bastards who'd killed them. We were "peacekeepers," not there for military operations. Reagan quite sensibly said to hell with it and pulled our guys out. The "humiliating defeat" was the UN's, since the rules were jiggered sufficiently to make sure the "Multinational Force" was an ineffectual group of targets in uniform, not a fighting force. Subsequent "Multinational Forces" in which the U.S. has participated have been put together and led by the U.S. Nor were we Israeli puppets: one of my friends related a story -- backed up by a couple of his NCOs who'd been there -- about having to pull a rod on an Israeli officer to get his point across at a bridge. That was before the kaboom.
More than 25 years on, was Vice-President Joseph Biden visiting Lebanon in the hope of averting another big setback to US influence at the same hands - but this time at the polling booths?
Did he open his mouth?
After talks with President Michel Suleiman - who is regarded as neutral in the sharply-polarised Lebanese arena - Mr Biden insisted he had not come to back any Lebanese party or person, but rather to support the country's independence and sovereignty. But at the same time, he urged "those who think about standing with the spoilers of peace not to miss this opportunity to walk away from the spoilers" - a remark clearly aimed at Hezbollah and its allies.
Who in turn snickered at the buffoon ...
Although the outcome hinges on voting results in a few hard-to-predict constituencies, the Hezbollah-led opposition stands a good chance of coming out narrowly ahead of the Western-backed coalition that the Americans would clearly like to see win.
It's their country. They can vote for whom they please. It's our money. We can spend it on whom we please -- and we've got enough financial problems right now.
Mr Biden also warned of likely consequences if Hezbollah and its allies were to prevail in the 7 June poll and form the kind of government Washington would frown on. The administration, he said, "will evaluate the shape of our assistance programmes based on the composition of the new government and the policies it advocates."

He then went off to see the Speaker of the Lebanese parliament, Nabih Berri, who is an ally of Hezbollah, and the Prime Minister, Fuad Siniora, who belongs to the Western-backed coalition.

If that implied balance, the impression was swiftly undermined by a later, unpublicised meeting behind closed doors in a private home with leaders of the pro-Western coalition who hold no official posts.

But Mr Biden insisted that Washington's commitment was to Lebanon, its sovereignty and independence. To back that up, he appeared with the Defence Minister, Elias al-Murr, at a display of some of the military hardware the US has supplied to the Lebanese Army in recent years.

Mr al-Murr said that, in a visit to Washington last month, he had been given a written commitment by Defence Secretary Robert Gates to provide the Lebanese Army with hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of arms and training over a five-year period, including helicopters and drones. Although that commitment might be reviewed in the light of the election results, Washington seems confident that the Lebanese Army can hold together and be built on as a neutral national institution despite the strain of coexistence with Hezbollah, whose military strength is greater.

Despite Mr Biden's protestations of neutrality, Hezbollah itself lost no time in dubbing his visit "a clear and detailed interference in Lebanese affairs" which raised "strong doubts about its real motivations."

As Mr Biden was showing off US military hardware in Beirut, Hezbollah was staging its own show of strength in Nabatieh, a provincial centre south-east of the capital. Thousands of supporters gathered to watch a relayed speech from their leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, to mark the anniversary of Israel's ignominious withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000 under the pressure of Hezbollah attacks.

But US leaders may already have concluded that a narrow win by the Hezbollah-led coalition would not be the end of the world.

Hezbollah itself is only putting forward 11 candidates in the contest for 128 parliamentary seats. The other elements in the opposition coalition come from allies such as the mainstream Shia Amal movement, headed by parliamentary Speaker Nabih Berri, and the Free Patriotic Movement of the Christian leader Michel Aoun, once a fierce opponent of Syria but now reconciled with Damascus and likely to do well in many Christian areas.

So, while generally unwelcome to the West, a narrow victory by the opposition would produce a picture very different from, for example, the Hamas takeover in Gaza, which was violent and absolute. The lines could be further blurred if Washington's diplomatic overtures to the Lebanese opposition's backers, Iran and Syria, were to produce results.

The Americans' closest ally, Britain, is already allowing its diplomats to hold official contacts with Hezbollah's "political wing", although the movement is still shunned by Washington as a "terrorist" group.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon says 222 militants killed in camp battle
2007-09-04
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon said on Tuesday its army killed at least 222 Islamist militants from an al Qaeda-linked group in a 15-week battle at a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon. The army finally took control of the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp on Sunday after more than three months of fierce battles, including air, sea and land bombardment against the entrenched Fatah al-Islam militants.

Defense Minister Elias al-Murr also said 202 militants were captured in the battles and an unknown number were buried in mass graves inside the largely destroyed camp. "This victory uprooted the biggest threat that faced the Lebanese people because Fatah al-Islam was spreading like cancer cells to target each part of the nation," Murr told a news briefing. "The organization was aiming to isolate the north from Lebanon to create a terrorist emirate," he said.

At least 42 civilians and 163 soldiers were killed, bringing the death toll to 427 -- Lebanon's worst internal violence since the 1975-1990 civil war.
But the result is much better: much of the Lebanese population currently adores their army for what they did.
The army's head of intelligence said Fatah al-Islam was directly linked to al Qaeda. The group has said it has no organizational ties to Osama bin Laden's network and that its aims were to spread its hardline interpretation of Islam among Palestinians and to fight Israel. But Brigadier General George Khoury told the same briefing: "All the investigations have confirmed that the Fatah al-Islam organization is linked to al Qaeda and is in continuous link and contact with it."

"This was revealed through all the investigations that were carried out of captured elements, communications that occurred between al Qaeda cells outside Lebanon and confessions of captured people," he said. Most of the militants were foreign Arab fighters and some had fought in Iraq.
That's not going to help the 'narrative' at all.
Lebanese soldiers who participated in the battles began returning to their bases on Tuesday as thousands of flag-waving Lebanese cheered them on the roads of northern Lebanon.

The army also said it had no information that linked the group to Syrian intelligence -- a charge maintained by the anti-Syrian cabinet but denied by Fatah al-Islam and Damascus."In this issue specifically, we have no information that indicates this group's link to Syrian intelligence. I want to affirm that the investigation on those captured has not ended ... and these investigations will reveal the truth in this matter," army Chief of Staff Major General Shawki al-Masri said.
Nope. Nuthin to see here...
Masri also said the army's entry to Nahr al-Bared did not mean it would go into other Palestinian camps in Lebanon ...
... though the Paleos ought to have had the fear of Allan put into them ...
... but that the army would prevent "terrorist acts" wherever they happen, either inside or outside Palestinian camps. Under a 1969 Arab agreement, the Lebanese army is banned from entering Lebanon's 12 Palestinian refugee camps. While the agreement was later annulled, it remained largely in place until the Nahr al-Bared battle began. "Of course it will not be allowed for Nahr al-Bared to return to the way it was. The responsibility of security will only be that of the Lebanese security forces," Masri said.

The government has said four Syrian members of Fatah al-Islam confessed to bombing two buses in February in a Christian area near Beirut. Preliminary investigations also link the group with an assassination attack on a Christian minister in November.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Mission accomplished - Lebanon DM declares victory
2007-06-22
Lebanon's Defense Minister Elias al-Murr said on Thursday the army's military operation against al Qaeda-inspired militants was over after the military destroyed all the militants' positions. "I can tell the Lebanese that as of now the military operation in Nahr al-Bared is finished. The army mission has been accomplished. " Murr told Lebanon's LBC television in a live interview.

Lebanon bulldozers wait for orders to enter the Palestinian Nahr al-Bared refugee camp in northern Lebanon June 21, 2007. The Lebanese army's insistence on the surrender of the leaders of a militant group holed up at a Palestinian camp is complicating efforts to mediate an end to fighting there, a Palestinian political source said on Thursday. A Lebanese security source confirmed the army wants the surrender of Fatah al-Islam leader Shaker al-Absi and his military commander known as Abu Huraira. Both were severely wounded but vowed not to surrender . The army insists that the militants are terrorists and murderers and they should be tried in court . Prime Minister Fouad Siniora promised a fair trial.
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