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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Using bed sheets, 5 prisoners escape Lebanese jail
2011-08-15
BEIRUT: Five prisoners escaped a high-security Lebanese prison Saturday by scaling down the building’s walls with bed sheets before mixing with visiting relatives and walking out of the compound with them, the interior minister said.
Oh! Oh! I seen this movie!
The minister, Marwan Charbel, blamed the escape from the Roumeih prison east of Beirut on bribing “the pure negligence” of the guards and demanded that officers who were in charge when the jail break took place be punished.

Lebanese authorities later released photographs, names and the nationalities of the five fugitives, urging people to contact police with any information. A security official said the five are a Lebanese, a Kuwaiti, a Sudanese and two Syrians.

Late Saturday, members of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah group detained the Sudanese man in the Biddawi refugee camp in northern Lebanon and handed him over to Lebanese authorities, security officials said on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

Local media reports said the escaped convicts included members of the Al-Qaeda-inspired Fatah Islam group. Charbel refused confirm or deny that there were Fatah Islam members among those who fled.

Fatah Islam fought a three-month battle against the army inside the Palestinian refugee camp Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon in 2007. The Lebanese army crushed the group after three months, but the clashes left 220 militants, 171 soldiers and 47 Palestinian civilians dead. Dozens of the group’s members were captured.

Lebanese troops, backed by an army helicopter, set up a security cordon around the prison and searched all cars leaving the area, security officials said.
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Arabia
Japanese Hostage in Yemen Freed
2009-11-25
[Asharq al-Aswat] A Japanese engineer freed after nine days held hostage by tribesmen near the Yemeni capital Sanaa voiced his relief at his release and said he just wanted to see his wife and take a shower.

Sanaa governor Numan Duid said the release of Takeo Mashimo on Monday followed a pledge by Yemeni authorities that the case of a member of the kidnappers' tribe held without charge would be examined.

As he emerged from a vehicle outside the Sanaa government building, Mashimo told a swarm of reporters he was "fine". When asked what he wanted to do first, he said in images shown on Japanese television: "I want to see my wife."

"I'm relieved that I was freed unharmed. Thank you," the 63-year-old Mashimo told a press conference.

Speaking to someone on a mobile phone, he said: "I'm all right. I want to take a shower as I didn't have one for nine days."

Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama welcomed the release, which came almost a week after a tribal leader in Yemen had mistakenly said Mashimo had been freed. Related article: Japan PM welcomes release of hostage in Yemen

"The Yemen government and the tribesmen did a very good job," Hatoyama told reporters in Tokyo, according to Jiji Press.

Mashimo's wife, 63-year-old Kyoko, told reporters in Tokyo after seeing him on television: "I was relieved as he looked good."

"I want to have him drink alcohol and eat sashimi, his favorite food," she said, according to the Kyodo news agency.

Tribes in Yemen, an impoverished country awash with weapons and gripped by domestic unrest, often kidnap foreigners to put pressure on local authorities.

Kyodo quoted the released hostage as saying by telephone: "At the beginning of the abduction, I felt very frightened as I was surrounded by many people armed with automatic rifles. As the days passed, I kept my cool."

Sheikh Abdul Jalil, a tribal leader in Arhab, the area northeast of the capital where the kidnapping took place on November 15, had mistakenly announced the engineer's release last Tuesday.

Tribal mediators had said the kidnappers were insisting on an exchange in which the detained Islamist member of their tribe would be freed.

A security official said the Islamist was a "dangerous element who has fought in Iraq and Nahr el-Bared", a Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon, and was "difficult to let free".

Hussein Abdullah Koub, 23, was jailed for a year by the US military in Iraq, before moving to Lebanon where he fought alongside Islamist militants against the Lebanese army in 2007, the official said.

He was later arrested in Syria before being taken into custody upon his return to Yemen.

Mediators said last week that Al-Qaeda militants had seized the hostage from his tribal kidnappers and moved him to an unknown location in the Maarib region of eastern Yemen.

But the Japanese embassy said he had not changed hands or been moved.

Mashimo is employed by a Tokyo-based consultancy working on the construction of an elementary school funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency.

More than 200 foreigners have been seized during the past 15 years, with most being freed unharmed.

But five Germans and a Briton, who were seized in June in the north of the country, are still missing with no word on their fate.

They were among nine people seized in the Saada region, the stronghold of Shiite rebels at war with the Sanaa government. The three others in the group -- two Germans and a South Korean -- were killed.

Two Japanese women were released unharmed in May 2008 after briefly being taken hostage by Yemeni tribesmen.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanese Army Recaptures Prison Fugitive
2009-08-21
A senior Lebanese security official says army commandos have recaptured fugitive from an al-Qaeda-inspired group a day after he escaped from prison. The official says Taha al-Hajj Suleiman of the Fatah Islam group was captured Wednesday in the woods north of the Roumieh prison east of Beirut.
Someone left a pick and a file in his birthday Koran?
A day earlier, eight Fatah Islam staged a dramatic prison break but only Suleiman was able to escape. Police and army forces launched a search campaign in areas around the prison until Suleiman was captured.

Fatah Islam fought a three-month battle against the army inside the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon in 2007.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Leb army busts 'terrorist network'
2008-10-13
Lebanese authorities on Sunday arrested a "terrorist network" behind deadly bomb attacks in the northern city of Tripoli, the army said. "Several members of a terrorist cell involved in the recent explosions in Tripoli have been arrested," the army said in a statement carried by the official news agency NNA.

The army said an explosives belt for use in another attack was found during the arrest operation carried out by a joint unit of soldiers and internal security forces.

A search is underway for a leading member of the cell, named as Abdul Ghani Ali Jawhar, the statement said, adding that those arrested are being questioned, without saying how many are being held.

Tripoli has also since May been rocked by deadly sectarian violence between Sunni Muslim supporters of the government and their Damascus-backed rivals from the Alawite community. Four soldiers and three civilians were killed as an explosion ripped through a military bus in the port city on September 29. A similar attack in mid-August killed 14 people, including nine soldiers and a child.

Last year, the army fought a 15-week battle with the al-Qaeda inspired Fatah al-Islam militia in a Palestinian refugee camp near Tripoli that killed 400 people, including 168 soldiers.

More detail, from Ya Libnan...
The Lebanese army says troops have arrested members of a terrorist group allegedly involved in recent bombings in northern Lebanon. "Several members of a terrorist cell involved in the recent explosions in Tripoli have been arrested," the army said in a statement carried by the official news agency NNA. The statement referred to Aug. 13 and Sept. 29 bombings in Tripoli. The bombings killed a total of 25 people, most of them Lebanese soldiers.

The statement did not give further details. But a security official speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press said three Palestinians were among those arrested.

The statement says an explosives belt in their possession was confiscated. It says troops were still pursuing Abdel-Ghani Jawhar, a leading member of the cell. The person who had the explosives belt is Alaa Mehrez, also known as Attiya. He was detained along with a woman in Bab el-Tebbaneh, Tripoli Sources said Mehrez was a brother-in-law of the main suspect on the run (Abdel-Ghani Jawhar).

The arrests were carried out near Baddawi, another Palestinian camp in north Lebanon. Security sources said six people were arrested , including four men from the same family: Mahmud Azzam, 80, and his three sons. The father and two of his sons were released after questioning. A fourth brother, Jihad, had been killed in last year's fighting with the army at the Nahr el Bared camp According to Almustaqbal TV the terrorist cell belongs to Fatah al Islam.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
18 killed, 40 wounded in Tripoli bus bombing
2008-08-13
A bomb exploded adjacent to a bus carrying civilians and members of the military during Wednesday morning rush hour in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, killing at least 18 people and wounding at least 40, security officials said. The dead included 10 off-duty soldiers.

The bomb was planted on the side of a main street and went off as the bus passed by. The streets were filled with people heading to work, which contributed to the many casualties, the officials said. The military had no immediate comment. The security officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The blast raised suspicions that al-Qaida-inspired Islamic militants may have sought revenge on the military for clashes last year at a nearby Palestinian refugee camp. But some local media speculated it may be aimed at undermining a visit later Wednesday by the Lebanese president to Syria to patch up stormy relations between the neighbors.

Information Minister Tarek Mitri described the incident as a big terrorist explosion but would not speculate on who was behind it. "The hands of the criminals have hit in Tripoli against innocent soldiers and civilians," he told reporters in Beirut. "Once again, they want our country to be an arena for settling scores and battling for influence."

Shattered glass could be seen in the Banks Street in Tripoli's center. Witnesses said fire engines and ambulances had rushed to the scene, while soldiers and policemen cordoned off the area to keep onlookers away and to investigate. The small public bus, which had been bringing passengers from the remote northernmost Akkar region, home to many military members, was riddled with shrapnel from the blast. Soldiers used sniffer dogs to search nearby parked car, as forensic experts in white uniforms, face masks and gloves sifted through the wreckage of the bus picking up evidence.

Tripoli, 90 kilometers (53 miles) north of Beirut, is Lebanon's second-largest city with a mostly Sunni Muslim population, dominated by groups loyal to the Western-backed parliament majority. It has witnessed sectarian clashes between Sunni fighters and followers of the Alawite sect, an offshoot Shiite sect, in the past weeks that killed and wounded dozens of people. The city is also close to the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el-Bared, which experienced deadly clashes in 2007 between Lebanese troops and members of the al-Qaida-inspired Fatah Islam group that left hundreds dead before the militants were defeated. During that fighting, the militants also were flushed out of the city.

Fatah Islam group has claimed responsibility for a bomb blast that killed a soldier in Abdeh near Tripoli on May 31.

Former Prime Minister Omar Karami - a prominent politician from Tripoli - said it is too early to speculate on the motive behind the explosion, but added that the high casualties among soldiers could mean the military was targeted and could be related to the 2007 Nahr el-Bared violence.

The latest violence comes at an especially sensitive time for Lebanon. On Tuesday, after a five-day debate and weeks of negotiations that preceded it, the parliament approved a national unity government that gives the Iranian-backed Hezbollah opposition a more powerful say in the running of the country, including veto power over major decisions.

The explosion also comes as President Michel Suleiman is expected on a landmark visit in neighboring Syria - the first visit by a Lebanese president in about three years. Ties have deteriorated since Syrian troops withdrew from Lebanon under international pressure in the wake of the Hariri assassination. Hariri's supporters blame Syria for the killing, while Damascus denies involvement.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Shaker al-Abssi slams Lebanon's Sunni leaders, Hezbollah chief
2008-06-11
Translated by Rantburg Translation Service
The runaway leader of the al-Qaida-inspired Fatah Islam group lashed out at Lebanon's Sunni politicians and the country's Shiite Hezbollah hard boys, and threatened kabooms in a new audio posted Tuesday on the Internet and carried by Lebanese television stations.

Shaker Youssef al-Absi said in the recording that time has now come for Dire Revenge™ against the "enemies of God" and added that kaboomers were ready for action. The authenticity of audio, posted on a web site commonly used by hard boys, could not be independently verified.

It was the second posting by al-Absi, sentenced to death earlier this year by a Lebanese court for a 2007 double bus bombings that killed three people and wounded 20. Al-Absi remains on the lam after escaping last September from fierce fighting between Fatah Islam and the Lebanese army at the Nahr el-Bared Paleostinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon.

Also in the audio, al-Absi claimed that Lebanese Sunni leaders and the head of the Shiite Hezbollah hard boy group, Hassan Nasrallah, seek to split the Sunni Muslim community, allegedly acting on American and Iranian orders to do this.

He also criticized the Lebanese army for not taking any action when Hezbollah fighters and their allies took over much of Muslim west Beirut from pro-government Sunni gunmen during bitter fighting last month that brought Lebanon close to a new civil war.

A Jordanian of Paleostinian origin, al-Absi specifically named Western-backed Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, and Parliament majority leader Saad Hariri, along with the Hezbollah chief in the audio. He also criticized Paleostinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who is a Sunni. Their goal, he alleged, "is the same and it is to humiliate and split the nation of monotheism," a reference to Sunni Islam. "One side takes orders from (U.S. President George W.) Bush while the other takes orders from the Satan's ayatollahs in Tehran," he said, referring to top Shiite clerics in Iran, adding that Sunni "lions of monotheism will destroy the enemies of God, whoever they are .... The enemies of God will not be safe from the booby-traps of Iraq and the boomer battalions, wherever they are."

Earlier this month, Fatah Islam claimed responsibility for a May 31 explosion that killed a Lebanese soldier in the northern town of Abdeh near the devastated Nahr el-Bared camp.

Lebanese authorities have said that 222 Fatah Islam hard boys were killed in the Nahr el-Bared fighting and more than 200 were arrested, while 169 Lebanese soldiers died. Paleostinian officials said 47 Paleostinian civilians also died in the camp as Lebanese army besieged the hard boys holed up inside.

Also Tuesday, an Islamic hard boy who was seriously wounded in the Paleostinian refugee camp of Ein el-Hilweh in southern Lebanon died of his wounds, security officials said. Jalal Hassanein, a 27-year-old Paleostinian, was shot by unknown assailants Monday night, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Warrants for 10 al-Qaeda suspects
2008-01-16
A military prosecutor Tuesday issued arrest warrants against 10 al-Qaeda suspects for allegedly planning to carry out terrorist attacks, illegal weapons possession and using forged identity cards, judicial officials said. All 10 are in custody, the officials said. Military prosecutor Rashid Mizher also issued arrest warrants against 10 other al-Qaeda suspects who are at large, the officials added.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media, did not say when the 10 were detained or give their nationalities. Since last year's three month battle between the Lebanese army and Muslim extremists in the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el-Bared, dozens of al-Qaeda and al-Qaeda-inspired Fatah al-Islam suspects have been detained.

In June, Lebanese troops discovered three vehicles rigged with explosives during a raid on a hideout in eastern Lebanon. The two cars and a van were discovered near the town of Bar Elias in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, a day after security forces captured three foreign militants in a nearby area.

Lebanon's official National News Agency said the 10 were among 30 who were charged with joining an armed group with the aim of carrying out terrorist attacks, possessing weapons and explosives, forging identity cards and giving refuge to wanted criminals. The officials said that Mizher will question the 10 as of next week in the presence of their lawyers.

Also Tuesday, Military Prosecutor George Rizk, indicted Lebanese citizen Mahmoud Rafeh and demanded the death sentence for him accusing him of being behind a 2003 explosion in Beirut that killed Hezbollah official Ali Hussein Saleh. Hezbollah blamed Israel for killing Saleh, who died when a bomb tore apart his car.

Rizk demanded the death sentence for Rafeh for "being recruited by a hostile army and ... and giving it information." In 2006, the Lebanese army said it had arrested Rafeh, 60, a retired police officer, on suspicion of killing two Lebanese brothers who were members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group. Rafeh "had links to Israeli intelligence," the army said then in a statement. Last week, prosecutor demanded the death sentence for Rafeh in the killing of the two brothers, Nidal and Mahmoud Majzoub.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Absi's widow claims that her husband is dead
2008-01-15
The widow of the fugitive leader of Fatah al-Islam terrorists claims that her husband Shaker al-Abssi is definitely dead and the voice on the last audio recording was not his , according to Saudi Arabian newspaper Okaz. She said her husband always wanted his death to be a source of confusion for his enemies. She added that the corpse at the Tripoli hospital which is marked A16 is his body .

Okaz also quoted Palestinian sources saying Wafa, Absi’s daughter ( who is the widow of Abu el Laith who was killed on the Iraqi Syrian borders before Nahr el Bared battle) is also certain that the voice of the recording is not her father‘s. Wafa is still living in the city of Sidon, south Lebanon awaiting emigration documentation.

The Lebanese public prosecutor has said DNA tests proved that Abssi, a Palestinian, was not among the fighters killed by Lebanese troops. Lebanese troops seized control of the camp on September 2. Abssi’s wife who insisted the body was that of her husband was accused of lying to deceive the army and allow Abssi to escape to Syria.

In a 58-minute audio recording posted on a Web site used by al Qaeda and other Islamist groups last Monday, the leader of the Fatah al-Islam group threatened attacks against the Lebanese army after it crushed its militants in battles at a refugee camp in northern Lebanon last year. "Nahr al-Bared camp will stand witness to your shame until the mujahideen tread your (bodies) with their shoes," a speaker who identified himself as Shaker al-Abssi said.

Absi, who served in the Syrian army was sentenced to death in absentia for the killing of a U.S. diplomat in Jordan in 2002. He was later jailed in Syria before setting up Fatah al-Islam in north Lebanon last year.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon arrests another Fatah al-Islam militant
2008-01-12
The Lebanese army arrested on Friday a suspected militant and a member of the Islamist group Fatah al-Islam which waged a 15-week a battle against the Lebanese army last summer in northern Lebanon, an army official said. Othman Turkmani, was detained in an army ambush on a street in the Bab el-Ramel neighborhood of the northern city of Tripoli, the official said. Turkmani wasn't armed at the time of his detention, he said.

It was the third detention of Fatah al-Islam militants in northern Lebanon in two days. On Thursday, two Fatah al-Islam members were seized in separate incidents, including high-ranking militant Nabil Rahim who, security sources said, is known to have links with the al-Qaeda terror network. Rahim's wife was also detained.

The security sources told the Al Hayat newspaper that Nabil Rahim, who was born in 1971, was always in contact with the second man in Fatah al-Islam Shehab al-Qadour, who was killed a few months ago as he was going to meet with Rahim. Rahim was responsible for training the Saudi militants in his apartment in Tripoli to send them to Iraq. The source explained that the organization's top official Sheikh Bassam Hammoud was detained in Saudi Arabia. The security sources revealed that they expect to extract more information on extremist groups in Lebanon from Rahim.

Shehab al-Qadour, who goes by the code name of Abu Huerira, was a member of a Sidon Fatah al-Islam at Ain el-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp before moving to north Lebanon's Nahr al-Bared camp.

The al-Qaeda-inspired Fatah Islam group is an extremist organization that engaged the Lebanese army for 106 days of fierce fighting last year in the Nahr el-Bared Palestinian refugee camp in Tripoli. The battle ended when the army overran the camp on September 2, 2007 and declared victory. The army arrested many but some members including their leader Shaker al Absi were able to escape. Absi fled to Syria .

The Nahr el Bared battle was bloody. According to the government 168 Lebanese soldiers died, 222 Fatah al-Islam terrorists were killed and 200 were arrested. Last week Absi threatened attacks against the Lebanese army : "Nahr al-Bared camp will stand witness to your shame until the mujahideen tread your (bodies) with their shoes," a speaker identified as Shaker al-Absi said in a 58-minute audio recording posted on a Web site used by al Qaeda and other Islamist groups on Monday. "This was only the beginning ... By God you will not live safely," he said. "The mill of war has started to grind ... between the infidels and the believers."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Fatah al-Islam sez they're infesting Ein el-Hellhole
2008-01-05
It seems that the Palestinian leadership did not learn any lessons from the Nahr el-Bared Palestinian refugee camp . Is there any other explanation for the presence of Fatah al-Islam terrorists in Ein el-Hilweh camp?

Ein el-Hilweh is the largest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon and is located near Sidon in the south. Fatah Al Islam has circulated a statement by fax to the local media agencies in which its group claimed responsibility for detonating explosive devices at dawn last Monday targeting "renegades and disbelievers inside Ein al-Hilweh camp." The statement was signed by "Media office of the Fatah al -Islam movement." The statement said: "Some thought that Fatah al-Islam has been wiped out , but those people will be disappointed when they find out that our flag is still hoisted and our swords are still pointing to the infidels , renegades and crusaders “.

Today the body of Jund el-Sham leader Saleh Abdallah was found hanged in the produce market of Sidon . Neither Fatah al Islam nor any other organization have claimed responsibility for this hanging . Jund al-Sham is based in Syria and is another militant group that Syria funds and trains according to sources that are familiar with this group.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
French MP: Syria has 10 to 15 active terrorist cells in Lebanon
2008-01-03
Syria has 10 to 15 terrorists cells throughout Lebanon which are protected by and given logistical support by Syria’s allies Hezbollah and Amal according to French parliamentary sources. The cells according to the MP are similar to the thirty three member terrorist cell that was discovered recently in Lebanon and was charged by Lebanese military magistrate . All the members of this cell were part of the Syrian intelligence and were protected by Amal and Hezbollah .

The French MP, who is a member of the national security and foreign relations committee of the parliament and who has access to sensitive intelligence reports said that the terrorist cells are similar to Fatah al Islam terrorist organization , that Syria tried but failed in marketing it as part the Al Qaeda network.

The Lebanese army fought Fatah al Islam terrorist at the Nahr el Bared Palestinian refugee camp for 106 days last summer , the battle ended in the defeat and disbanding of the terrorist organization. Its leader Shaker al Absi escaped the battle and fled to Syria where he came from .
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Who killed Lebanon's top army general ?
2007-12-13
A powerful car bomb killed a front-runner to become the next head of Lebanon's army in an attack Wednesday that many feared aimed to wreck attempts to elect a new president and damage the military, which has kept the turmoil-plagued nation together.

The blast that killed Brig. Gen. Francois Hajj and two other people was a new shock in Lebanon's year-long political crisis -- the first such attack on the military, which is widely seen by Lebanese as a neutral force keeping the feuding sides apart. With no claim of responsibility, there was widespread speculation over the motive for the attack. Some anti-Syrian politicians accused Damascus, saying it was trying to torpedo efforts to elect a president, though Syria's foreign minister quickly condemned the bombing. Others said the attack could be a warning to the military to stay out of politics or vengeance by Islamic militants for an army offensive that Hajj led against them last summer.
Ohfergawdsake. Hajj was in line to replace Suleiman as army chief and he wasn't a Syrian toady. That's pretty transparent.
The confusion highlighted how Wednesday's attack was unusual in both target and timing, coming at a time when Lebanon's feuding politicians are struggling to chose a new president. The post has been empty since Nov. 23 when Emile Lahoud's term ended.

Hajj's boss, army commander Gen. Michael Suleiman, has emerged as a possible consensus candidate for the post, though his election has been held up by continued political wrangling. Hajj, a Maronite Christian, was a leading candidate to replace Suleiman as head of the military if Suleiman becomes president.
"Yes, yes, Legume! That's all very well! But what motive could anyone have had for killing him?"
Since 2005, Lebanon has seen a string of similar bombings and attacks that have killed eight prominent anti-Syrian figures. The perpetrators have never been identified, but anti-Syrian politicians who back Lebanon's government have accused Damascus of being behind the attacks, a claim Syria has denied.

But Lebanon's military has remained on good terms with the Syrians and has largely acted with impartiality in Lebanon's bitter political power struggle between allies and opponents of Damascus, winning it the respect of both camps. Suleiman was believed to have the tacit consent of Syria for the presidency, though Damascus has not publicly taken a stance.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem told reporters in Damascus, «We condemn this criminal act and every measure that jeopardizes Lebanon's security and stability.» An unidentified Syrian official in the state news agency SANA blamed Israel for the killing.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the bombing was «highly disturbing» given Lebanon's crisis. He said the U.S. did not know who was behind the attack but said Lebanese must be left to choose their president «free from outside interference.» Washington has often accused Damascus of meddling in Lebanese politics.

McCormack praised Syria's denunciation of the bombing as «positive» -- a sign of the somewhat warmer ties between the two rivals after Syria attended last month's Mideast peace conference in Annapolis. But he added that «while denunciations are useful, they need to be backed up by actions.

Fears have been high that the power vacuum could lead to violence between Lebanon's two camps. Wednesday's bombing prompted calls for Lebanese to rally together. Anti-Syrian leader Walid Jumblatt called for dialogue with the opposition, which is led by Hezbollah, Syria and Iran's ally. «The nation and the army come first,» Jumblatt said on television, calling for an «honorable» political solution acceptable to both feuding camps.

The blast went off at 7:10 a.m. on a busy street with school buses and morning commuters in Baabda, a mainly Christian suburb of Beirut where the presidential palace is located and where army presence is heavy. Hajj, who lives in the area, had left his home few minutes earlier, probably heading to his office at the nearby Defense Ministry, security officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance with military rules. A parked car packed with 35 kilograms (77 pounds) of TNT exploded, apparently set off by remote control, ripping through Hajj's SUV, setting several other nearby ablaze and knocking a crater two meters (yards) wide and a meter (yard) deep into the pavement. Two bodies were thrown about 15 meters (yards) by the force of the blast. Troops sealed off the area as firefighters tried to put out the flames in at least two cars. The security officials said the general, his driver and bodyguard were confirmed dead. Emergency workers were searching in nearby bushes for a possible fourth body.

The military, in a statement confirming Hajj's death, refrained from placing blame, saying only a «criminal hand» was behind the attack. Military chief Suleiman called on all sides «not to use the blood of the martyr in politics or in an attempt to cast doubt about the military's abilities. No matter what terrorism does it will not make the army or the Lebanese people submit.»

Prime Minister Fouad Saniora said the aim was to undermine the army's role. «I am confident their (attackers') goals will fail and the army's morale will remain high,» he told a meeting of security chiefs Wednesday. But some in the anti-Syrian coalition that backs Siniora's government pointed the finger at Damascus. Telecommunications Minister Marwan Hamadeh, speaking to Associated Press Television News, accused the «Syrian-Iranian axis» of hitting the military, «the only body in Lebanon who can balance the power of Hezbollah and other militias in the country.»

Hezbollah denounced the assassination, calling it «a great national loss.» Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun, a former army chief who is allied with Hezbollah, said he had supported Hajj to become the new army commander if Suleiman became president.

Suspicion also fell on Islamic militants. Hajj had led a three-month military campaign that crushed al-Qaida-inspired militants in the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon over the summer. Islamic militants were believed linked to a car bomb attack that killed six Spanish troops in the U.N. peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon in June.
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