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Hezbollah demands inquiry into Beirut killings

Hezbollah, Lebanon's most powerful faction, on Monday demanded to know who was behind shooting that killed eight opposition supporters in some of Beirut's worst street violence since the 1975-90 civil war.

Posted: Monday, January 28, 2008, 11:29 (GMT)
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Hezbollah, Lebanon's most powerful faction, on Monday demanded to know who was behind shooting that killed eight opposition supporters in some of Beirut's worst street violence since the 1975-90 civil war.

The pro-Syrian group said any cover up would be a threat "to stability and civil peace" in Lebanon. The bloodshed has fuelled fears of factional violence unless a 14-month political crisis is resolved.

Shi'ite Muslim Hezbollah has been leading an opposition campaign against Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's U.S.-backed government. The political stalemate has left Lebanon without a president since November.

Security sources said at least 29 people were wounded in the violence on Sunday after the army moved to break up a protest by anti-government activists against power cuts. One of the wounded later died in hospital.

"Did those who fell as martyrs and were wounded fall by the army's bullets, and if so, who issued the order for the soldiers to fire?" Hezbollah asked in a statement. "Or was there another party, and who was it?"

The group said it held the authorities responsible for "every drop of blood spilt".

Witnesses said soldiers had fired to break up the demonstration. The army, whose leader has been agreed as the next president, has launched an inquiry into who was behind the killings.

A ninth person was killed in south Lebanon when hit by a car during a protest against the shootings, security sources said.

Hezbollah and Amal, another pro-Syrian Shi'ite party, decided to bury the dead separately on Monday, avoiding a mass funeral that could further raise tensions.

Schools and universities were closed to mark a national day of mourning called by the government.

The violence close to both Shi'ite and Christian areas was the worst in Beirut since supporters of the anti-Syrian governing coalition and its pro-Damascus rivals clashed a year ago.

ARMY CREDIBILITY

The political crisis has deepened divisions between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims and Christians loyal to rival leaders.

Hezbollah, which has a highly trained guerrilla army, has consistently stated its opposition to any civil conflict and says its weapons are directed only at Israel.

The army has been widely credited with keeping the peace among Lebanese during three years of political turbulence since the killing of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri in 2005.

It has stayed neutral in the political conflict and policed demonstrations by both pro- and anti-Syrian groups.

Army chief General Michel Suleiman had been agreed by rival leaders as the candidate to fill the presidency, a post empty since the term of the pro-Syrian Emile Lahoud ended.

But Suleiman's election by parliament has been delayed by a dispute between the sides over the make-up of a new government.

Commentator Sateh Noureddin said any suggestion the army was behind the deaths would strip it of its status as a neutral guarantor of civil peace. "In our history, the first sign of a new civil war is a loss in confidence in the Lebanese army," he told Reuters.



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Added: Wednesday, January 30, 2008, 1:35 (GMT)

It is so frustrating and insulting to hear and read that the ones who are destabelizing peace and democracy in Lebanon are the ones asking for justice and investigations. Hezbollah( an International terrorist organization on most contries governments security lists) is the strongest Faction on Lebanese territory, directly linked to the iranian regime, openly allied with the syrian regime, fully armed from rifles to missiles with a range of more than 200km, not forgetting security and intelligence, hit teams and demolition experts, suicide walking or vehicule bombs, just to mention a few of the assets of a shiite/iranian government with full regions of Lebanese soil out of government's reach, supported by millions of iranian petro dollars. Last but not least, they send their people to protest about electricity cuts, something they do not pay for to the government, and their protest is organized on a sunday afternoon, the same time of the arab league meeting discussing the Lebanese matter, and they "attack" a Christian neighbourhood known during the 1975-1990 civil war of being always under muslim/syrian attacks and heavy bombings but never supressed, destroying govrnment and private property, burning cars and trucks and destroying shops and houses, hitting young and old people next to their properties and sending them to hospitals, and throwing hand grenades wounding seven persons of a group of residents trying to stop lutings and robery in a street where the Lebanese army was not present. After all this, and after insulting the Lebanese army and throwing stones at soldiers trying to prevent hundreds of protesters organized in multiple waves in more than three axes of movment towards the Chritian area, they tried to aproch them and steal their weapons and vehicules and then shot at them, and they want an investigation opened to now how hezbollah militias died, as martyrs. Can you imagine what they will do when they weaken the Lebanese army and get full control of the government ? GOD help us ALL.

said akhrass, beirut, Lebanon

Added: Monday, January 28, 2008, 19:02 (GMT)

Hezbollah are terrorists and have no right to demand anything. Ignore them.

Tom, Utah, USA

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