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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Qandil : 'Saudi Arabia conspiring against Lebanon'
2008-02-21
Former MP Nasser Qandil, a staunch ally of Syria, on Tuesday accused Saudi Arabia of "conspiring against Lebanon" and supporting an Israeli aggression. Qandil made the charge in a statement to reporters after meeting vice president of the higher Shiite Islamic Council Sheikh Abdul Amir Qabalan. "We believe that an American-Israeli war is behind the door and it would be a continuity of the July (2006) war … unfortunately the same countries that had planned, financed and executed the July aggression stand behind continuity of this war," Qandil said.

He noted that the assassination of Hezbollah's Imad Mughniyeh "strangely coincided with the declaration by a group of states about banning citizens from visiting Lebanon, as if the suspect is saying here I am."

Saudi Arabia on Monday issued a travel advisory urging citizens to avoid Lebanon due to the persisting situation. Qandil said citizens of such states that he did not mention by name "would not be treated for what their governments do." Restricting travel to Lebanon, according to Qandil, is a "serious indication that the decision to go to war has been taken." He warned Lebanese leaders against "hurling Lebanon in a new civil war that would change it into scorched earth."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Qandil: Syria's Army will be back in Lebanon
2008-02-13
Former MP Nasser Qandil, a staunch supporter of Syria and a suspect in the Hariri assassination rejected the international tribunal as "illegitimate" and predicted the return of Syria's army to Lebanon. The International tribunal is being established in Holland to try all the suspects in the Hariri assassination. The top Syrian security officials were named as suspects by Detlev Mehlis , the first UN chief investigator .

Qandil told a news conference Tuesday that the tribunal is based on an agreement between the government of Premier Fouad Siniora and the United Nations.

"The Siniora government is illegitimate and does not have the right to conclude agreements. Any contract concluded with the Siniora government is binding to this particular government and not to the Lebanese people," Qandil said.

He criticized the arrest of the four generals( who are also suspects in the Hariri assassination) , claiming they were mere "political detainees. Unless the four generals were released … there will be no justice, no truth and, consequently, no international tribunal," Qandil said.

He urged the Iranian and Syrian backed Hezbullah-led opposition to include the release of the four generals on its agenda for any understanding to settle the political situation.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Pro-Syrian Lebanese shrugs off Bush travel ban
2007-07-01
A pro-Syrian Lebanese politician on Saturday shrugged off a US travel ban, referring to it sarcastically as a “precious gift” that showed the Lebanese government was a tool in Washington’s hand.

President George W Bush on Friday banned 10 Syrian officials and Lebanese politicians, whom Washington accuses of undermining Prime Minister Fouad al-Siniora, from entering the United States. The list of Syrian officials includes Assef Shawkat, director of military intelligence and brother-in-law of President Bashar al-Assad, Hisham Ikhtiyar, an Assad adviser, Brigadier General Rustom Ghazali, former head of Syrian intelligence in Lebanon, and his assistant Brigadier General Jama’a Jama’a. The list includes six pro-Syrian Lebanese politicians — five former cabinet ministers and a former member of parliament.

Lebanese ex-MP Nasser Qandil, one of the six, said he would send a cable to Bush thanking him for his decision “which he sees as a precious gift that shows the true nature of the political conflict in Lebanon”. “The Lebanese are confronting the American policies and the (Lebanese) government is nothing but a tool of the American plan,” Qandil’s office said in a statement. Qandil said the ban also exposed Bush’s calls for promoting freedom of speech and democracy as “fraudulent”. He said he was considering legal steps against the US president.

The US move followed repeated calls for Damascus to stop fomenting instability in Lebanon, where Washington is trying to shore up the elected government of the embattled Siniora. The Lebanese opposition, led by the pro-Syrian Hezbollah group, has been demanding a national unity government since all its ministers quit Siniora’s cabinet nearly eight months ago. Siniora, backed by the United States, France and Saudi Arabia, has refused the opposition demand, which ultimately gives Syria’s allies veto power in his government.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Bush banned entry to US for Syrians with Lebanon links
2007-06-30
President George W. Bush on Friday banned entry to the United States by Syrian and Lebanese officials whom Washington accuses of undermining the Lebanese government, the White House said.

The list of Syrian officials the United States considers to have meddled in Lebanon includes Assef Shawkat, Syria's director of military intelligence ( brother-in-law of president Bashar el-Assad), Hisham Ikhtiyar, adviser to President Assad and the former head of Syria's security apparatus in Lebanon, Rustom Ghazali , Juma'a Juma'a, top Syrian military intelligence official, according to information provided by the White House. The list of the Lebanese who are banned entry includes the four former Lebanese ministers - Abdel-Rahim Mrad, Assad Hardan, Assem Qanso and Michel Samaha, Wiam Wahhab and former MP Nasser Qandil The U.S. move followed repeated calls by Washington for Damascus to stop fomenting instability in Lebanon.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanese in streets demand resignation of Lahoud, Assad
2005-10-21
BEIRUT/NEW YORK: Two thousand people returned to Lebanon's Martyrs' Square Friday, in front of the tomb of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in Beirut, to call for the resignation of the presidents of Syria and Lebanon. The protests came after the publication of a damning UN report into the murder of Hariri, which pointed to the involvement of Lebanese and Syrian security services.

"Down with [Syrian President Bashar] Assad," and "Resign [Lebanese President Emile] Lahoud," shouted the demonstrators, brandishing Lebanese flags. The demonstrators had responded to a call from youth movements linked to the anti-Syrian faction of Hariri's son Saad, which is the largest grouping in Lebanon's Parliament.

From New York, Mehlis said that the "editorial process" carried out under his directions may have resulted in two differing versions of his report on the investigation into the assassination of Hariri. U.S. Ambassador to the UN John Bolton commented on the matter Friday: "I have seen several versions of the report and at the moment I don't understand why there are several versions of the report."

Mehlis said during a news conference at UN headquarters in New York on Friday that "we produced a number of versions of the report, and I was just informed and made aware that one of several earlier drafts had made its way to the media." "I think this is distracting from the main point of the report itself," Bolton said regarding the differences in the leaked reports, "the substance of which doesn't change no matter what version you have or how good you are at software."

According to Mehlis, "the official version of the report is the one that was submitted to [UN Secretary General Kofi] Annan and transmitted by him to the Security Council." He continued: "I want to make it clear that any differences between earlier versions and the final version of the text resulted from the editorial process carried out by my team under my direction and are my responsibility."

The controversy concerned omitted names of top Syrian and Lebanese officials, whom, according to a witness statement included in a version apparently never meant for the public, had "decided to assassinate Hariri." The names of Maher Assad (brother of Syrian President Bashar Assad), Assef Shawkat (Assad's brother-in-law), Syrian intelligence generals Hassan Khalil and Bahjat Suleyman, and Jamil al-Sayyed (head of the Lebanese Surete Generale), and Mustafa Hamdan (head of Lebanese Presidential Guards) were deleted in a version leaked to the press.
He said the names were left out because of "a presumption of innocence" and so as not to give the impression that the allegations made by a witness were "an established fact."

Mehlis also denied allegations by the press that the changes were made during his meeting with Annan. Yet, the changes appeared to have been made at the time when he met the Annan, according to computer printouts of the unedited report. "None of these changes were influenced by anyone," Mehlis said. Mehlis is expected to brief the Security Council on the report Friday.

Meanwhile, President Emile Lahoud denied in a statement issued Friday that he received any phone calls on the day Hariri was murdered from Ahmad Abdel-Al, a member of the Sunni fundamentalist group Al-Ahbash.
Lahoud further considered allegations that he was linked to the murder as "groundless and void," and said he had been targeted by a campaign to mar his reputation. Lahoud added that he "has complete faith in the Lebanese judiciary," and stressed "the importance of inflicting severe punishment against the perpetrators" of Hariri's killing.

Mehlis' report had stated that Abdel-Al called Lahoud shortly before the assassination, and depicted Abdel-Al as "a key figure in any ongoing investigation." Abdel-Al is currently under arrest on illegal weapons charges, while Mustafa Hamdan's brother, Majed, remains at large in the same case. Al-Ahbash denied the allegations Friday that one of its officials, Mahmoud Abdel-Al, brother of Ahmad, had any involvement in Hariri's assassination.

The Palestinian Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) also refuted allegations in the Mehlis report that its leader Ahmad Jibril was connected to the assassination. "We are ready to present any of our members if he was proven to have a hand in the terrorist crime which we condemn," the faction said in a statement released Friday.

Meanwhile, security sources said that State Security General Faisal al-Rashid and several military officers were detained early Friday morning, shortly after the report was leaked to the press. Rumors also circulated Friday that former MP Nasser Qandil had been placed under house arrest, but a judicial source said there was "nothing against Qandil, so far." - With agencies
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Eid interrogates witnesses in Hariri case
2005-09-14
Lebanese Investigating Magistrate Elias Eid evaluated the depositions of three witnesses in investigation into the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, after he "interrogated them on Monday" according to judicial sources. The sources added that this is "the first time Eid has interrogated the three witnesses, who have already been questioned by the UN investigating team" looking into Hariri's murder.

The sources added that the head of the UN team, German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis "is currently preparing a road map for his next step of interrogating Syrian officers." Mehlis is expected to start his interrogation of the Syrian officers next week, after agreeing on Monday the procedure of the interrogations with the Syrian Foreign Ministry. It is understood that the former heads of Syria's recently dismantled intelligence apparatus in Lebanon will be among the those questioned by Mehlis. Brigadier Generals Ghazi Kenaan and Rustom Ghazaleh, in addition to Generals Jamaa Jamaa and Mohammad Khallouf, are expected to be top of the interrogation list.

Kenaan is the current Syrian interior minister, but served as Damascus' military intelligence chief in Lebanon from 1982 to 2002. Ghazaleh was his successor until Syria's military and intelligence units withdrew from Lebanon on April 26, amid mounting international pressure. Jamaa and Khallouf were heads of central intelligence units in Lebanon during the 29 years of Syrian military presence in Lebanon. The sources added that Mehlis' questions "would most probably aim at establishing a link between the four arrested top Lebanese security officers and the Syrian officers."

So far, Mehlis' interrogations have led to the arrest of Lebanon's Major General Ali Hajj, Brigadier General Raymond Azar, Brigadier General Mustafa Hamdan, and Major General Jamil Sayyed, former heads of the Internal Security Forces, Military Intelligence, Presidential Guards and General Security, respectively. All four have been charged by the Judiciary with planning the assassination and are currently awaiting trial in Roumieh prison. Sources have indicated that more arrests are expected which is why some "24 prison cells have been prepared to hold the new detainees." On Tuesday, local newspaper Al-Balad reported that Sayyed had issued some 170 "normal and diplomatic" passports to Syrian intelligence agents and officers, and that the names of these personnel have been listed at borders and airports to stop them having freedom of movement.

Former MP, Nasser Qandil, who was questioned several times by the UN team, remains a suspect while Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Seyassah reported that "this MP has given a primary and dangerous confession and has promised to reveal the perpetrators if he gets international protection." Al-Seyassah also reported that a source close to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan told the newspaper that some "six to 10 suspects have been named in the assassination," adding their punishment would be the "death penalty if they are prosecuted in Lebanon or a maximum of 30 years imprisonment if judged by an international tribunal." Al-Seyassah's UN sources added that there is an almost definite impression that the most important figures in the crime are four people "two Lebanese and two Syrians" naming these as "Hamdan, Sayyed, Kenaan and Ghazaleh."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Qandil questioned again...
2005-09-09
Investigator Detlev Mehlis' UN team has questioned Nasser Qandil, a former pro-Syrian MP, for a second time. Qandil was questioned last month on the same day the four former security chiefs who are now charged with Hariri's murder were detained. Early last week Mehlis had said that Qandil remained a suspect even though he was not held in custody.
Wonder how much Qandil has in the bank, and where it came from...
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
More Arrests Ensue After Qandil's Release
2005-09-01
A Lebanese gallery owner and a Syrian man were arrested yesterday as investigation into the murder of late Premier Rafik Hariri intensifed. UN investigators and Lebanese internal security forces raided two apartments in Beirut's southern suburbs that security sources said may have been used to plan Hariri's assassination. The source said forensic experts accompanied the officers. Following the raids, Lebanese police detained the owner of one of the apartments, Hashem Nassar, who also owns a furniture gallery in the same building. It is understood he has no official links to either the government or the armed forces. The second detainee was a Syrian national who was unidentified. Both are suspects in the assassination according to internal security sources.

Judiciary sources said the investigation committee learned about the two Beirut apartments during Tuesday's questioning of Mustafa Hamdan, head Presidential Guard, Jamil Sayyed, former chief of Surete General, Ali Hajj, former Internal Security Forces chief, Raymond Azar, former army intelligence chief, and former pro-Syrian MP Nasser Qandil. Qandil was released from custody early Wednesday. It was unclear who provided the information. The four suspects were transferred yesterday from the UN investigation team's headquarters in Monteverde, Mount Lebanon, to ISF headquarters in central Beirut. The four are now being held in separate cells for what security officials said was "investigative necessity."

Elias Eid, Lebanon's investigating magistrate into the case is expected to question the four again before determining whether to release them or place them under formal arrest. He may also decide to place them under house arrest. But it has emerged that Eid will not begin questioning the suspects until the Lebanese judiciary finishes translating the investigation reports from the UN investigation committee, which a source from the Lebanese Justice Ministry told The Daily Star would take "a couple of days." Under Lebanese law the suspects must be formally charged within 48 hours or released, but Eid has the power to detain them for a further 48 hours before deciding their fate.

As the UN team was questioning the four suspects on Tuesday, the Hariri owned Al-Mustaqbal newspaper claimed the four had "held meetings to prepare for the crime" in a Beirut apartment. The newspaper added: "They also inspected the site of the attack the day before and afterward tampered with evidence at the scene to put investigators on the wrong track." The arrest of the suspects has intensified international pressure on the Syrian government as well as Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, since all four suspects are close allies to both Damascus and Lahoud.

Following a closed UN Security Council briefing late Tuesday night, U.S. Deputy Ambassador to the UN Anne Patterson said that Undersecretary General for Political Affairs Ibrahim Gambari said Syria was still failing to cooperate with the probe, despite fresh commitments from President Bashar Assad that the UN was free to question "any Syrian official." Syria has not commented officially on Tuesday's detentions in Lebanon or yesterday's detention of a Syrian national, but the daily political commentary by the Syrian-state-run Radio of Damascus denied any involvement by Syria in the murder. The commentary said: "Syria will cooperate with the UN committee. It is in its best interest to do so."

Meanwhile, Lahoud, who met with Justice Minister Charles Rizk yesterday, said "everybody wants the truth to be revealed in Hariri's murder." But, indirectly defending the suspects, Lahoud said: "We want a truth that would not be affected by the internationally-created political and media climates, climates which have been created since the first moment of the crime and for well-known reasons." He added: "Those climates neither restore the country's national interests, nor protect it from plots aimed at destabilizing the nation's unity and territorial integrity."

Meanwhile, Mehlis, whose commission has rounded up about 240 people for questioning since April, is set to hold a news conference in Beirut today, as UN divers, aided by Lebanese security forces, continued their scanning of the coastal area near the bomb site. There were reports that more parts of the Mitsubishi truck that was used in the assassination of Hariri were found, but they were not confirmed.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria may have to face the Security Council
2005-09-01
German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis surprised local politicians and officials by making crucial advances in the probe into the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Observers considered these developments as dramatic and strategic steps toward revealing the truth behind the murder. Melhis, in cooperation with Lebanese authorities, conducted a raid on the homes of three former security chiefs and former MP Nasser Qandil, escorting the well-known figures to the UN probe committee's headquarters in Monteverdi, but this time as suspects and not witnesses.

Apparently, Mehlis has acquired precise and important information on the assassination through his interrogation of 240 witnesses, in addition to statements made by some Lebanese to irritate the security regime that was dominating the country. These statements seem to have led to the uncovering of key information, which led Mehlis to take legal action against the former security chiefs for their suspected involvement in the crime or for hiding information and tampering with evidence at the scene.

Observers said the international community is keeping abreast of the commission's mission, noting the Security Council meeting held Tuesday night after the arrests of the security chiefs. The Security Council hailed Mehlis' decision, and once more urged Syria to cooperate with the investigative committee. Despite reassurances by President Bashar Assad, made during an interview with the German newspaper Der Spiegel, of Syria's willingness to cooperate fully, as well as its innocence of all allegations leveled against it, no such change in relations has been detected.
The old "say one thing, do another trick."
Observers were also quick to point out the internationalization of the Hariri's assassination in the wake of UN Security Council Resolution 1595, which created the international probe, and calls for an international trial in the event the commission "names names." Observers believe there is a preference for such a court, particularly as security officials are suspected to have been involved in the crime, which would require an international trial in order to guarantee the necessary judicial impartiality.

In the event Syria continues its refusal to cooperate with the committee, the Security Council would be forced to increase its pressures on Damascus for the implementation of the international resolutions in question, in particular Resolution 1595, and could also take economic measures as well. Accordingly, the arrest of Lebanon's former security chiefs can only tighten the noose around Syria and force it to abide by the international resolutions. The Hariri assassination probe will not be limited to revealing the identities of the perpetrators, but will further seek to uncover the identities of those who plotted and provoked the crime. In light of these crucial developments, the Security Council will call for the complete implementation of UN Resolution 1559 and the establishment of independent and free institutions in the country.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon ex-security chiefs held
2005-08-30
Lebanon has arrested the head of the president's guard and three ex-security chiefs as suspects in the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. They are being questioned by a United Nations team investigating the bombing which killed 21 people last February. All four - including the former head of general security Jamil al-Sayyed - have close ties to Syria, which was widely blamed for the blast. Syria has denied any role, but has been criticised for hindering the UN probe. The UN investigator, German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis, is due to report his findings to the Security Council in the next few weeks. A fifth suspect, a pro-Syrian member of the Lebanese parliament, is also being sought by police.
This is one of Assad's "what were you thinking?" moments. He must not have thought it was a big thing when he signed off on killing Hariri — just another boom in a long string of sporadic booms, just another pol moved out of the way in the stately minuet of Leb politix. Instead, he ends up losing his mini-empire and in the end will likely lose his grip on Syria. All the obfuscation and stonewalling isn't going to be enough to keep the investigation from showing the links to Syria's hard boyz, not even with UN investigators.
BBC correspondent Kim Ghattas says the detentions constitute the first major development in the investigation into Mr Hariri's killing. In addition to Mr Sayyed, the former internal security forces head Ali al-Hajj and former military intelligence head Raymond Azar were seized in early morning raids on Tuesday. Mustafa Hamdan, the head of the presidential guard, later turned himself in to the UN investigators. The police also raided the house of a fifth person, Nasser Qandil, a former legislator and staunch Syrian ally. Mr Qandil was not at home and his wife said he was in Syria.
... and isn't expected back...
Mr Sayyed was widely seen as Lebanon's most powerful security figure between the end of the civil war in 1990 and the withdrawal of Syrian forces earlier this year. He and the others resigned earlier this year after huge anti-Syrian demonstrations following Mr Hariri's assassination.
Resigned reluctantly, we might add...
Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora told reporters that Mr Mehlis had briefed him on the investigation, and he decided to summon the four security chiefs "in order to question them as suspects". He has interrogated them previously. Mr Mehlis' team has no power to arrest or charge suspects, but has a co-operation agreement with the Lebanese authorities and can request action through the internal security services. Under Lebanese law, the four men can be questioned for 48 hours, after which they should be charged or released.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Sectarian innuendo increases as Parliamentary elections draw near
2005-01-24
Whether used as a diversionary tactic or to gain an advantage in the ongoing jostling for majority representation in the upcoming May parliamentary elections, the sharp increase in sectarian innuendo is too dangerous to ignore. Many agree that Lebanon's confessional diversity sharply differentiates the country from its surrounding Arab neighbors, acknowledging that such a religious plurality is more of an asset than a handicap. However, in an environment in which politics is so closely entangled with religion sentiment, any cracks surfacing in this fragile bond could lead to catastrophe.

Following a 15-year bloody civil war, Lebanese are hoping they bid farewell to sectarianism and now shudder at the mere thought of going back to that dreadful part of Lebanon's history. In fact, the 1989 Taif Accord was introduced to end the cycle of sectarian violence and ensure proper confessional representation in government and guarantee coexistence among Lebanese of all religions and sects. Orthodox Archbishop Roland Abu Jaoude was visibly shaken and angry Sunday at sectarian remarks floating ever since talks of a new electoral law that would divide Beirut into three confessional electoral districts emerged. Beirut's division has been viewed as an attempt at "clipping" former Premier Rafik Hariri's wings, in essence limiting his dominance in Parliament. This has been further reinforced upon Prime Minister Omar Karami's cancellation last Monday of a Hariri-backed "Conference Palace" project "due to dire economic conditions."

Describing talk of the division as only demagogy, Abu Jaoude said that those speaking a sectarian language are themselves sectarian and can give lessons in it. On Monday, Interior Minister Suleiman Franjieh will announce his proposal to the Cabinet, which is expected to endorse the electoral law on Thursday, with the qada to be recommended as the next electoral district. Nabatieh MP Qassem Hashem expressed on Sunday fears that this type of districting will encourage sectarian sentiments, while Tripoli MP Najib Mikati warned that the absence of "state logic" and escalating sectarian language are creating a political atmosphere that is regulated and driven by confessional impulses and not by national interests. Hizbullah officials had warned that reverting to the 1960 qada law would ultimately "polarize" the Parliament and bring into it fundamentalists who do not represent or reflect national sentiments. Nevertheless, Abu Jaoude's remarks were more in reference to remarks made by Beirut MP Nasser Qandil over a week ago when he said that one Christian vote would equal two Muslim votes in the event small electoral districts are adopted, as smaller districts tend to favor minorities.

These remarks were followed by Metn MP Pierre Gemayel's argument during a Phalange Party dinner that "if they have a majority, we have quality." Although Gemayel clarified last week that his statement was in response to political statements made by Hizbullah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, and not based on sectarian considerations, the damage was already done. Karami's political adviser, Khaldoun Sharif attacked Gemayel and his father, former President Amin Gemayel, accusing them of stirring sectarian sentiment. Now, the issue of voting age is threatening to take the sectarian tone to new levels. Last Friday, Baalbek-Hermel MP and former Speaker Hussein Husseini addressed a letter to Franjieh explaining the rules and measures required for the new electoral law. Among the suggestions is a proposed draft constitutional amendment to lower the voting age from 21 to 18.

Such a proposal is not new. It emerged in 1998 and was endorsed by 102 MPs including Husseini and Karami. However, the Parliamentary petition was consequently shelved by Parliament in 2002 because of fears mainly expressed by Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Butros Sfeir and Christian MPs that the law would radically alter voter ratios in favor of Muslim voters. Sfeir has long contended that Maronites make up the majority of Lebanese emigrants - totaling about eight million - and should be given Lebanese citizenship and be allowed to participate in the electoral ticket in tandem with the reduction of the voting age, in order to maintain the electoral demographic balance. Whatever the face of the new electoral law turns out to be, many are hoping it will not disfigure the current coexistence picture that Lebanese swear and live by.
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Syria-Lebanon
Lahoud: Israel needs to ‘recognize’ Hizbullah. Really.
2004-01-26
President Emile Lahoud said on Sunday that the German-mediated prisoner swap which was announced on the weekend was “clear recognition” by Israel of Hizbullah as a legitimate power. The prisoner swap, which came after three years of intensive negotiations between Hizbullah and Israel with the help of German mediation will involve the exchange of more than 400 Lebanese and Arab prisoners for three Israeli soldiers – presumed dead – as well as Elhanan Tannenbaum who is presumed known to be alive. All four Israelis were kidnapped captured in 2000. “The liberation of prisoners and detainees via this method of negotiation is a clear recognition on the part of Israel that the resistance is legitimate and national and is not a foreign terrorist movement as Israel claims,” said Lahoud, in a statement, “otherwise it would not have negotiated via a friendly nation and with the knowledge of Lebanese authorities.”
There's still time to call the damned thing off...
Lahoud also said Lebanese and Arabs should consider the swap as “proof that Israel has no immunity when it violates international laws.” The president also considered Israel’s occupation of Arab land and its torture of Palestinians as “only temporary.” Prime Minister Rafik Hariri expressed his joy at the success of the negotiations and said, “this agreement concludes a bitter chapter for the detainees and their families.” He also congratulated the Lebanese resistance on its achievements at the Lebanese and Arab levels. Beirut MP Nasser Qandil asked “what will the American ambassador Vincent Battle say? He told us just a day before that Hizbullah was a foreign terrorist organization.” Also, both former prime ministers of the country, Rashid Solh and Salim Hoss, praised Hizbullah’s achievement and said the event was a great day for the Palestinian cause, the Lebanese people and the Arab world.
Yep. A definite source of Arab pride.
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