World ignores signs of civil
war in Lebanon
By Robert Fisk in Beirut
01/27/07 "The
Independent" -- - This is how the 1975-90
conflict began in Lebanon. Outbreaks of sectarian
hatred, appeals for restraint, promises of aid from
Western and Arab nations and a total refusal to
understand that this is how civil wars begin.
The Lebanese army lifted its overnight curfew on Beirut
yesterday morning but the smouldering cars and trucks of
a gun battle was matched only by the incendiary language
of the country's bitterest antagonists. Beirut's morning
newspapers carried graphic pictures of gunmen - Sunni
Muslims loyal to the government and Shia supporters of
Hizbollah - which proved beyond any doubt that organised,
armed men are on the capital's streets. The Lebanese
army - which constantly seeks the help of leaders on all
sides - had great difficulty in suppressing the latest
battles.
One widely-used picture showed a businessman firing a
pistol at Shia during the fighting around the Lebanese
Arab university, another a hooded man with a sniper's
rifle on a rooftop.
All three dead men were Hizbollah supporters whose
funerals in south Beirut and in the Bekaa Valley
yesterday were accompanied by calls for revenge and - in
one case - by a colour guard of militiamen and farewell
shots over his grave. After 29-year old Adnan Shamas's
widow and young children were brought to his funeral in
Ouzai, there were cries of "blood for blood".
It was all very far from the self-congratulations of the
western and Arab leaders in Paris yesterday, where
European and American diplomats - after drumming up £4bn
in aid for Lebanon (strings attached, of course) -
seemed to believe they had just saved Fouad Siniora's
government from the forces of Islamic "extremists".
Samir Geagea, the ex-civil war militia killer turned
ardent government supporter - and host to the US
ambassador this week - angrily turned on Hizbollah's
leader, Sayad Hassan Nasrallah yesterday, chiding him
over Hizbollah's war with Israel last summer, when Shia
fighters fired thousands of rockets into Israel. "Don't
think, Sayad Hassan, that Beirut is Haifa or Mount
Carmel," he warned. "Let's sit together and we will
discuss things together ... Otherwise the country is
heading for the worst."
Talal Arslan, a pro-Syrian Druze leader, ferociously
referred to government groups as an "organised crime
syndicate" that wanted to turn Lebanon into another
Iraq.
Which is exactly the language of 1975. It all seemed so
far away in Paris where Siniora, talking to Lebanese
residents and journalists, mystifyingly found himself
fielding questions on Lebanon's agricultural industry
and future tourism prospects. There is certainly plenty
of history for any tourists in Lebanon but right now a
new and terrible page appears to be opening while the
rest of the world blithely looks on.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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