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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Clashes intensify in Ain al-Helweh as death toll climbs to 9 11
2023-08-01
[AnNahar] Clashes continued Monday for the third day in a Paleostinian camp in Leb
...an Iranian colony situated on the eastern Mediterranean, conveniently adjacent to Israel. Formerly inhabited by hardy Phoenecian traders, its official language is now Arabic, with the usual unpleasant side effects. The Leb civil war, between 1975 and 1990, lasted a little over 145 years and produced 120,000 fatalities. The average length of a ceasefire was measured in seconds. The Lebs maintain a precarious sectarian balance among Shiites, Sunnis, and about a dozeen flavors of Christians. It is the home of Hezbollah, which periodically starts a war with the Zionist Entity, gets Beirut pounded to rubble, and then declares victory and has a parade. The Lebs have the curious habit of periodically murdering their heads of state or prime ministers...
between members of Paleostinian President the ineffectual Mahmoud Abbas
...aka Abu Mazen, a graduate of the prestigious unaccredited Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow with a doctorate in Holocaust Denial. While no Yasser Arafat, he has his own brand of evil, just a little more lowercase....
’ Fatah group and Islamist factions. The corpse count from the fighting rose to nine, officials said.

The festivities between members of Paleostinian president Mahmoud Abbas's secular Fatah movement and Islamists have forced dozens of frightened residents to flee their homes in the camp, which has gained notoriety as a refuge for turbans and runaways.

Limited skirmishes erupted again Sunday night, escalating into heavy festivities with gunfire and shelling on Monday, said the AFP correspondent in the southern city of Sidon, where the camp is located.

"Things are supposed to go back to normal soon," an official involved in the ceasefire negotiations told AFP, asking for anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

The official added that they were working on "preventing further escalation".

Paleostinian factions said they had reached a ceasefire on Sunday, but the truce did not hold.

On Monday morning, Lebanon's official news agency NNA reported "increased festivities" using heavy weaponry, with exchanges of gunfire concentrated in the al-Tawarek neighbourhood -- a stronghold for Islamist Death Eaters.

Dozens of residents, mostly women and kiddies, fled the camp carrying light luggage, while others took refuge in a nearby mosque, AFP's correspondent said.

Fighting began overnight on Saturday, killing an Islamist and injuring six others, a Paleostinian source inside the camp had told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
for security reasons.

The next day, a Fatah military leader and four of his colleagues were killed during a "heinous operation", the group said.

Shells also fell outside the walls of the camp over the past two days, AFP observed. A nearby hospital evacuated patients and shops in Sidon closed fearing further escalation.

Fighting between rival groups is common in Ain al-Helweh, which is home to more than 54,000 registered Paleostinian refugees who have been joined in recent years by thousands of Paleostinians fleeing the war in Syria.

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Paleostinian president Mahmoud Abbas both issued statements Sunday decrying the violence.

Lebanese politician Osama Saad, who represents the Sidon area where the camp is located, said he and other Lebanese officials and security forces would meet with the Paleostinian factions on Monday to push for a cease-fire.
Subsequently from Dawn:
Three days of fighting in south Lebanon’s Ain al-Helweh Palestinian refugee camp have left at least 11 dead and dozens wounded, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees said on Monday.

Clashes broke out over the weekend between members of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas’s secular Fatah movement and Islamist fighter based in the camp, Lebanon’s largest located in the coastal city of Sidon.

Renewed gunfire and shelling on Monday shook the camp, said a correspondent in Sidon, sending frightened residents fleeing.

“According to reports, 11 were killed and another 40 were injured, including one staff member” of UNRWA, said Dorothee Klaus, the UN agency’s director in Lebanon.

Fatah and Islamist group say they have agreed on a truce in Sidon

She added in a statement that UNRWA has “temporarily suspended” operations in the camp due to the fighting.

More from The Times of Israel:
Thousands of mourners gathered in south Lebanon on Monday for the funeral of a Palestinian military general with the Fatah group, whose killing in a refugee camp in Lebanon fueled fierce sectarian street battles that have killed at least 11 people.

Three days of clashes between Palestinian factions at the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp have pitted members of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah party against Islamist groups accused of gunning down the general, Abu Ashraf al Armoushi, on Sunday.

A Lebanese lawmaker announced a ceasefire agreement late Monday, which appeared to calm the situation, but sporadic gunfire continued afterward. Earlier efforts to broker a ceasefire had failed to stop the shooting and shelling through the narrow streets of the Ein el-Hilweh camp in southern Lebanon.

Armoushi’s funeral was held in another refugee community, the al-Rashidieh camp, where he had lived.

“This heinous crime doesn’t benefit anyone but the enemy, and that is the Zionists, because they are the primary and only beneficiary,” said Jalal Abuchehab, a Fatah official at al-Rashidieh camp, during Armoushi’s funeral.
Related:
Ain al-Helweh: 2023-07-31 Bullets, shells hit Sidon as deadly clashes renew in Ain al-Hellhole; end-of-day hudna fails
Ain al-Helweh: 2023-03-03 Clashes kill one in Palestinian refugee camp
Ain al-Helweh: 2014-02-07 Syria Conflict Spurs Growing Jihadist Threat in Lebanon
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Hizbullah loses parliamentary majority, Oct. 17 secures 16 seats
2022-05-18
[AnNahar] Lebanon Hezbollahstan
...In 2020 Hezbollah blew up a considerable portion of Beirut and many of its inhabitants when its ammonium nitrate facility exploded. They blamed it on... somebody else. It wasn't them though. Trust them on that. And it ain't never coming to trial...
's 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...
and its allies lost their parliamentary majority, official results showed Tuesday, while independents achieved a surprise breakthrough.

Full results announced by the interior ministry two days after the election revealed that no bloc will control the 128-seat assembly, a deadlock observers fear could usher in a tense period of political jostling.

The polls, the first since Lebanon was ravaged by its worst ever economic crisis and a cataclysmic explosion at Beirut port in 2020, were seen as a prerequisite for a crucial IMF bailout.

The Hizbollah-led coalition won 61 seats in the 128-member legislature, a drop of 10 members since the last vote was held four years ago. They fell short of the 65 needed to retain a majority following Sunday's polls. The loss was largely due to setbacks suffered by the group’s political partners, and was not expected to weaken the group’s domination of Lebanese politics. All 13 Hizbullah candidates who ran got elected.

Their strongest opponents in parliament will be led by the Christian Lebanese Forces
A Christian political party founded by Bashir Gemayel, who was then bumped off when he was elected president of Leb...
party of former warlord 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...
, that raked in several new seats on the back of a virulent anti-Hizbullah campaign.

New reformist faces who entered the legislative race on the values of a 2019 anti-establishment uprising made a stronger showing that many had predicted.

17 candidates who backed the 2019 protest movement won seats. At least twelve of them will sit in parliament for the first time.

Together with independents and other non-aligned MPs who have sometimes supported the now-defunct protest movement's demands, they could find themselves in a kingmaking position.

They could obtain the support of MP Osama Saad, who supported the protests, and new MP Abdul Rahman al-Bizri.

That was a major achievement considering they went into the vote fragmented and facing intimidation and threats by entrenched mainstream parties. Their showing sends a strong message to ruling class politicians who have held on to their seats despite an economic meltdown that has impoverished the country and triggered the biggest wave of emigration since the 1975-90 civil war.

One of the most notable victories notched up by independents was the election in the third South district of Elias Jradeh and Firas Hamdan for seats that Hizbullah and its allies had not lost in three decades.

Another major satisfaction for those described in Lebanon as the "thawra" (revolution, in Arabic) candidates, was the defeat of several reviled MPs loyal to the Syrian government of Bashir al-Assad.

Hizbullah weapons: Will polls make radical changes
[AnNahar] The main issue that would polarize the new parliament elected on Sunday is Hizbullah's right to keep an arsenal that is described as equivalent to or better than the state's.

Some see it as a historical right and the best defense for the small Mediterranean country while others consider Hizbullah's weapons to be the root of all of Lebanon's ills.

“They forgot the political system, economic system, corruption, the war in Syria and its effects on Lebanon and they forgot the American sanctions,” Hibullah's MP Hussein Haj Hassan said.

Sami Nader, an analyst with the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs, said that Hizbullah had suffered symbolic losses but was skeptical the polls could yield radical changes.

"Hizbullah and the Iranian axis took a blow but will this pave way for change in Lebanon? I have doubts," he told AFP.

The formation of a government, the election of parliament's speaker and the presidential election could all be very contentious and lead to protracted political crises.

Speaker Nabih Berri has held his job since 1992.

President Michel Aoun, the world's third oldest head of state, had long planned for his son-in-law Jebran Bassil to take over but the Lebanese Forces' surge in the polls could disrupt that scenario.

Disarming Hizbullah has dominated political campaigns among almost all of the group’s opponents, while Hizbullah supporters consider the group defended Lebanon against Israel and against attacks by the Islamic State group and al-Qaida-linked militants over the years.

Related: Final results: Interior Ministry announces all 128 MPs
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Early Results Emerge in Lebanon's Parliamentary Vote
2018-05-07
[AnNahar] Preliminary results started emerging around mmidnight Monday after Leb voted in its first parliamentary elections in nine years.

Media reports said the 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...
-AMAL Movement coalition won all seats in south Leb's second and thirds electoral districts.

The coalition's campaign meanwhile said its list won four seats in Beirut's second district -- one for Hizbullah, one for AMAL, one for al-Ahbash and one for the Free Patriotic Movement
Despite its name a Christian party allied with Hizbullah, neither free nor particularly patriotic...
According to media reports, the list of 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 has him bumped off, too.
's al-Mustaqbal
... the Future Movement, political party led by Saad Hariri...
Movement won six seats in the district as the businessman Fouad Makhzoumi won a Sunni seat.

In Beirut's first district -- Ashrafieh, Saifi, Rmeil and Medawar -- the list backed by the Lebanese Forces
A Christian political party founded by Bashir Gemayel, who was then bumped off when he was elected president of Leb...
and the Kataeb Party won three seats as three seats went to the list backed by the Free Patriotic Movement and the Tashnag Party
Socialist party representing the Armenian diaspora in Leb. They're Christians, but they try to remain neutral, which means they get shot at without shooting back...
and two went to the Kollouna Watani civil society coalition -- Joumana Haddad and Paula Yagoubian.

Also according to media reports, MP Bahia Hariri retained her seat in Sidon as Popular Nasserite Organization chief Osama Saad won the city's second Sunni seat and his ally Ibrahim Azar won a Maronite seat in Jezzine.

The FPM meanwhile won two seats in Jezzine, including that of incumbent MP Ziad Aswad.

Elsewhere, FPM chief Jebran Bassil announced that he won a Maronite seat he ran for in Batroun and that the FPM has won a seat in Akkar.

The Marada Movement
the personal militia of Suleiman Franjieh, president of Lebanon at the outbreak of the civil war, currently Syrian toadies, but you never know when that could change...
meanwhile announced that it won four seats in the Batroun-Koura-Bsharri-Zgharta district as three went to the coalition of the Free Patriotic Movement, al-Mustaqbal Movement and Michel Mouawad and three other seats were clinched by the Lebanese Forces-Kataeb Party alliance.

In Tripoli
...a confusing city, one end of which is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn...
-Minieh-Dinniyeh, the lists of ex-PM Najib Miqati, al-Mustaqbal Movement and ex-minister Faisal Karami were leading the vote count.

In Baabda, the Hizbullah-FPM coalition won four seats as the LF and the Progressive Socialist Party managed to win two seats.

In northern Metn, the leading candidates at 12:30 am were Sami Gemayel, Ibrahim Kanaan, Eddie Abi al-Lamaa, Michel Murr, Hagop Pakradounian and Elias Bou Saab.

Low Turnout in Lebanon's First Parliamentary Vote in 9 Years

A Look at the Key Players In the Lebanese Elections

Link


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Hundreds commemorate Land Day in Umm al-Fahm
2018-04-02
[Ynet] Commemorating protesters killed in 1976 riots over expropriation of Arab lands, Arab residents hold a moment of silence in solidarity with Paleostinians rubbed out in Friday's Gazoo border festivities, say they're willing to sacrifice their lives for the 'deaders.'

Hundreds of people took part in a rally near Umm al-Fahm
...home of the outlawed northern branch of the Islamic Movement, the Israeli branch of the Muslim Brotherhood...
on Saturday marking 42 years since Land Day.

The participants held a moment of silence in solidarity with the Paleostinians killed in Gazoo border festivities the previous day, saying "they died as shahids (deaders)."

The rally was attended, among others, by Arab members of Knesset Ahmad Tibi, Ayman Odeh, Hanin Zoabi, Abd Al Hakeem Haj Yahya, Yusef Jabareen and Jamal Zahalka, as well as former Knesset Member Osama Saadi And other leaders of the Arab public.

The demonstrators in Umm al-Fahm waved Paleostinian flags and shouted, "We will sacrifice our lives for the deaders." Dozens called to take to the streets and demonstrate, saying "the Israeli government is murdering in cold blood. Speeches will not help, only protests blocking roads."

MK Zahalka echoed the demonstrators' invective, calling the state's actions on the Gazoo border a "massacre."

"Israel is executing people to intimidate and scare," he claimed. "We cannot sit and watch it on TV. We must come out and fight in order for Israel to stop the massacre in Gazoo. Every person must participate in this struggle. I suggested blocking roads and there are also other proposals. We will not remain silent."

Mohammad Barakeh, former MK and chairman of the High Follow-Up Committee for Arab Citizens of Israel, an organization that represents Arab citizens of Israel at the national level and the body that organized the demonstration, said it is meant to send a message to Israel "that it must stop the massacre" on the Gazoo border.

At the same time as the demonstration in Umm al-Fahm, about 100 people, mainly women, from the Women Wage Peace movement demonstrated at Yad Mordechai Junction, calling to "lift the siege on Gazoo" and chanting, "We will not forgive and will not accept the murder of demonstrators."

Land Day marks events that took place on 30 March 1976 when the Israeli government, headed by Yitzhak Rabin, expropriated Arab lands in the Galilee. In the ensuing confrontations with Israeli security forces, six Arab citizens were killed, about one hundred were maimed, and hundreds of others were tossed in the calaboose
Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please!
Over the years, the day came to symbolize Arab national identity on which Arabs demand rights they say they are deprived of.

Palestinians “March” in West Bank in Solidarity

[Haaretz] Six Paleostinian demonstrators were maimed during festivities in the West Bank village of Abu Dis. Of the six maimed in the West Bank, five Paleostinians were reportedly hit with rubber bullets and one with live fire.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Popular Nasserite Organization Chief Warns of Sectarian Strife in Sidon
2013-06-20
[An Nahar] Popular Nasserite Organization head Osama Saad stressed on Wednesday that the security deterioration in the southern city of Sidon endangers the civil peace and aims at creating a sectarian civil war.

He expressed regret in a presser over the security, stability and economy losses in the city, a day after festivities erupted between Salafist holy man Sheikh Ahmed al-Asir and the Hizbullah-affiliated Resistance Brigades in the suburb of Abra.

"The attack launched by al-Asir supporters forced people to evacuate their homes," Saad said.

The official reject attempts to involve Sidon in "sectarian sedition."

Saad slammed "those who intervened to protect people who aim at destabilizing the situation in the city," accusing al-Mustaqbal
... the Future Movement, political party led by Saad Hariri...
movement and other Islamists of participating in Tuesday's incidents.

Clashes erupted on Tuesday afternoon between supporters of Asir, the imam of Sidon's Bilal bin Rabah Mosque, and the Resistance
That'd be the Hezbullies, natch...
Brigades in the Sidon neighborhood of Abra, leaving at least one person dead and four others maimed.

The Lebanese army deployed in Sidon as the violence comes amid soaring sectarian tensions in Leb that have escalated because of the raging war in neighboring Syria.

The army said several people were maimed by the gunfire.

Asir, who espouses an austere form of Sunni Islam, is known for his opposition to Hizbullah.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
1 Dead, 3 Hurt as Members of Resistance Brigades, Nasserite Organization Clash in Sidon
2013-01-04
[An Nahar] An exchange of gunfire erupted on Thursday evening in Sidon between members of the Popular Nasserite Organization led by ex-MP Osama Saad and the Hizbullah-affiliated Resistance Brigades, leaving one person dead and three others maimed.

Future TV said "fierce festivities erupted in the Nazlet Sidon area between a group belonging to the Popular Nasserite Organization and another belonging to 'Hizbullah's brigades'."

It added that one person was killed and two others were maimed in the clash.

Al-Jadeed television said the army deployed heavily in the area, reporting the same casualty toll.

"A clash between Mahmoud Bazaza and Abu Rabih al-Masri erupted in Sidon's Nazlet Sidon area, which resulted in the death of Mohammed Birar, who belongs to the Resistance
That'd be the Hezbullies, natch...
Brigades," state-run National News Agency reported later.

"At once, an army force and members of the Internal Security Forces deployed in the area," NNA said.

Meanwhile,
...back at the palazzo, Count Guido had escaped from his bonds and overwhelmed his guard using the bludgeon the faithful Filomena had smuggled to him in the loaf of bread...
LBCI television said "a supporter of the Popular Nasserite Organization was maimed in the leg as gunfire erupted in Nazlet Sidon."
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Osama Saad's Nasserite Organization Accuses Bahia Hariri of Arming Supporters
2010-11-20
[An Nahar] The Popular Nasserite Organization led by Osama Saad on Friday accused MP Bahia Hariri of arming her supporters with "large quantities of weapons."

In a statement issued Friday, Saad said motorists have been repeatedly stopped by Hariri's "gunnies" across Sidon, including Majdalyoun and Kuneissat, where their cars were being searched.
The statement said motorists were also being "intimidated and treated roughly."

"These militia-style acts came after MP Bahia Hariri distributed large quantities of weapons to its supporters and followers," added the statement.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Naharnet: Leb Elections 2009 Live Coverage
2009-06-07
  • 5:05pm Fist fights erupt between supporters of PM Fouad Saniora and candidate Osama Saad in Saida.
  • 5:00pm LBC: LBC team was attacked in Beirut.
  • 4:40pm MP Saad Hariri following a tour of polling centers in Beirut: I hope that all Lebanese will exercise patience during the election process.
  • 4:30pm Baroud: No extension of voting hours across the entire country. Extending voting hours is only up to the polling center registrar.
  • 4:27pm Baroud denied use of forged IDs, adding that extending voting hours till after 7pm may vary depending on each polling center.
  • 4:25pm Baroud: The security plan was a success and all breaches were not a cause for concern and were quickly brought under army and police control.
  • 4:20pm Baroud during a news conference at interior ministry: The intensity of the ballot was normal in some areas and upsetting in others.
  • 3:35pm NBN: reports of a scuffle between Justice Minister Ibrahim Najjar's bodyguards and Lebanese troops in Zahle.
  • 3:30pm Syriac Bishop George Saliba denied reports that priest Akari had been held by MP Michel Murr supporters.
  • 3:11pm MP Mohammed Raad after casting his vote: The problem of congestion at polling stations is due to holding elections in a single day.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Lebanon's opposition threatens to boycott presidential vote
2007-12-24
Lebanon's Syria-backed opposition threatened Sunday to boycott next week's parliament session to elect a new president unless the ruling coalition agrees to the shape of a future government ahead of the vote. The threat is likely to scuttle the presidential vote for the 11th time because the Western-backed majority has rejected the opposition's conditions, saying the shape of the next government could be discussed only after the presidential vote.
Kind of the point, isn't it?
The opposition will participate in the presidential vote, now scheduled for Dec. 29, "only in the framework of a clear and integrated political agreement as part of a full package with clear guarantees," said Hussein al-Haj Hassan a legislator from the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which leads the opposition. Absent this agreement, "the opposition will not go to the voting session next Saturday and will not facilitate the election process," said Hassan in the statement.

The post has been empty since pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud's term ended Nov. 23, plunging the country into the worst political crisis since the end of the 1975-90 civil war.

Lawmakers on both sides have agreed to back army commander Gen. Michel Suleiman as a compromise candidate, but parliament must first amend the constitution to allow a sitting military chief to become president. This process has been complicated by the opposition's demand for a new unity government that would give it veto power over major decisions, which the ruling coalition has rejected. "The political process is inter-linked. The presidency, the government and other issues cannot be separated from each other," said Hassan Fadlallah, another Hezbollah lawmaker.

The ruling coalition has accused the opposition of obstructing the presidential vote under orders from Syria and Iran, which back Hezbollah. In turn, the opposition claims pro-government groups in the parliament majority follow US policies. "The problem is not with Gen. Suleiman as a consensus candidate, but with a group (the ruling coalition) that changes its political stands according to American dictates," said Hassan.

Also Sunday, opposition lawmakers lashed out at US President George W. Bush for urging the parliamentary majority to elect a president with a simple majority if necessary to resolve a long political deadlock. Lebanon's sharply divided parliament has failed ten times to elect a president because the opposition has boycotted sessions, preventing a two-thirds quorum to convene a session. The ruling coalition has avoided trying to use its slim majority in parliament to elect a president, which would escalate tensions with the opposition. Bush urged such a step for the first time Thursday. "Bush didn't enter a country where he didn't cause wars and strife," said Fadlallah, the Hezbollah legislator. "He is trying to spread his experiment to Lebanon."

Opposition legislator Osama Saad agreed, saying Bush's call would plunge Lebanon into "chaos and expose it to dangers."
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Saudis attack Syrian VP over remarks on Lebanon elections
2007-12-18
Saudi newspapers launched a vehement attack against Syrian Vice president Farouk al-Sharaa over remarks he made on the Lebanese presidential elections issue and assurances he gave that Syria and its Lebanese allies are better off now than they were when the Syrian forces were in Lebanon. The London-based daily Asharq Al-Awsat said Sharaa "deserves to be called Farouq al sharakh," Arabic for "split," citing that "each time he speaks about politics he causes a split among Arabs."

It said Sharaa's political language "is in no way comparable to politicians," adding that his remarks on Lebanon "show the difference between Sharaa's thoughts and those of the Saudis in terms of Lebanon's stability." Al Okaz newspaper described Sharaa's comments on Lebanon as "instigative speeches." Sharaa "did not conceal his desire for the continuity of the Lebanese crisis and the constitutional vacuum Beirut is facing."

The daily AL Watan, in turn, said Sharaa "exposed his role as well as that of his colleagues in Lebanon when he stressed that he and his allies are stronger than any time before, revealing the (party) that is sabotaging the election process in Lebanon."

Sharaa had rejected "pressure" on Lebanese friends of Syria, saying "everyone now wants us to step in and pressure Aoun, Hezbollah, Berri, Wiam Wahhab, Osama Saad, Karami and Franjieh. They are all friends of Syria and they are better off now than they were when the Syrian forces were in Lebanon." Sharaa adding that postponing the elections "is not the end of the world."

Farouk al-Sharaa 69, is one of the most prominent officials in the Assad regime and served as foreign minister of Syria from 1984 until 2006 when he became vice-president of Syria. Prior to joining the government he worked for Syrian Air Lines for over a decade as an airline attendant . During the 1970s he became an active member of the Ba'ath Party. His role in the Baath party helped Sharaa in joining the Syrian regime as a diplomat without ever having any training or education in this field .This is why he acquired the the title of “Undiplomatic diplomat.“
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Fatah general signals impatience with contentious militia in South
2006-02-20
The general supervisor of the Fatah Movement in Lebanon, Brigadier Munir Maqdah, said that he was "ready to put an end to the armed militants who are causing trouble in the Taamir area by resorting to military options or by peaceful means."
But... but... Don't you have to negotiate for seven or eight years and then get a UN resolution? What's Amnesia International have to say about all that?
Speaking on Sunday to The Daily Star, Maqdah, referring to the Jund al-Sham militia, said "we have many options including a military option provided that peaceful methods are not neglected."
"Being Paleostinians, we prefer the peaceful methods, of course... Mahmoud, that man is snickering. Kill him."
On Friday, the Lebanese Army was on a high state of alert when clashes almost broke out between the Jund al-Sham militia and the army over rumors that a supporter of the militia, Mohammed Shmandour, a Lebanese national, had been beaten to death by the Lebanese Army. Shmandour was arrested last week on rumors that he possessed weapons and ammunition. That caused some 50 Jund al-Sham militants who were armed and masked and members from Shmandour's family to protest by setting car tires on fire.
Most places, that would lead to further arrests. Maybe even in La Belle France.
A Lebanese-Palestinian Follow-Up Committee held an emergency meeting with Sheikh Abu Abeida, an official in Usbat al-Ansar, an outlawed Islamic fundamentalist group.
Where was the meeting held? The Hole in the Wall?
During the emergency meeting, Maqdah said that he needed "a written agreement from Sidon MPs Osama Saad and Bahia Hariri as well as approval from the Lebanese Army and Palestinian factions in order to take the steps. But still there is no answer."
Lemme see, here... An outlawed militant group meets with the gummint side and sez it needs written authorization to take the law into its own hands and wreak carnage on another outlawed militant group in a town that's within Lebanon but not controlled by the Lebs. I think I got that. My head spun around 360 degrees and now my neck hurts, but I got it.
An Ein el-Hilweh resident said "the Lebanese Army had blocked the roads again on Saturday night for more than six hours preventing cars from going inside the camp." Two hand grenades were thrown on Saturday inside the camp in Hay al-Manshiyye and in Khat al-Sikke areas but no casualties or damage were reported. Roads were later reopened on Sunday morning.
"Are they done throwing hand grenades, sergeant?"
"I think so, sir!"
"Very well. Reopen the road."
MP Bahia Hariri, after a meeting with a delegation from Taamir, described the situation as a "ticking time bomb." More than seven months ago there were attempts to instigate trouble with the Lebanese Army in Taamir.
Link


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Family of Sidon mayor blasts UN probe team over summons
2005-11-29
SIDON: Rouqayya Bizri, the sister of Sidon mayor Abdel-Rahman Bizri, condemned her summons for interrogation Monday by the UN probe investigating the murder of former Premier Rafik Hariri.

"You have to know who reported my name to the judiciary!" she shouted, during a gathering in the home of the late minister Nazih Bizri. Rouqayya Bizri, along with citizens Hassan Hashisho and his wife Sukayna, were summoned by the judiciary for interrogation into the case on Sunday. "He who gave my name to the investigators is capable of doing the same to someone else tomorrow," Rouqayya added.
"Tell us who the stoolie is so we can shut him up!"
In the Bizri residence, a gathering of more than 100 representatives of various confessions and of several Lebanese and Palestinian parties, social, cultural and educational associations in addition to MPs Osama Saad and Antoine Khoury, was held to discuss the interrogation. Rouqayya called for justice, urging the city officials to identify her "informant." Hashisho and his wife did not comment.

The absence of Sidon MP Bahia Hariri, the sister of Rafik Hariri, as well as the absence of a representative of the Amal Movement and Hizbullah was noticeable.

Participants reported that Abdel-Rahman Bizri received a telephone call from Prime Minister Fouad Siniora inquiring about the issue. The mayor asserted that the family "is keen on preserving the unity of the Lebanese despite their viewpoints, but it is keener about knowing the truth behind Hariri's assassination." Commenting on Siniora's phone call, he said: "The premier is now aware of the situation." He added that the decision is now his and said: "I hope that Siniora will proceed to what is proper, not only to preserve the dignity of the Bizri family, but also the credibility of the investigation."

He said: "Summoning my sister is regrettable; as for the family's friend Hashisho and his wife, they are absolutely innocent and could have no possible information regarding the investigation." The mayor stressed that the family anger is a response to "the disrespect caused to the family name." "Such a summoning does not only tarnish the reputation of people and their social status and profession, it also misleads the investigation and could depict a feeling of carelessness in the probe." He indicated that lawyers were contacted about the issue.

He denounced the way the summons was carried out arguing that "those who summoned my sister and Hashisho are well aware of the privacy, the dignity and nobility of the house as well as the nature of conversations that take place in it, so if it [the judiciary] believes that they hold information that might help in the investigation, there are more proper and legal ways to do so."
Well, we could do it the traditional Arab way. Knock down the door in the middle of the night and drag the whole family off to a secret basement cell for a quiet talk. That better for your "family honor"?
Bizri revealed that Bahia Hariri contacted him, and stressed that if the Sidon MP wished to preserve the credibility of the probe, she should proclaim that she contacted him.
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