Rival
Leaders
Order General
Strike
By Robert Fisk:
08/05/08 "The
Independent" --
- Burning tyres
on the airport
road, flights
suspended,
demands from the
Druze leader
Walid Jumblatt
that Hizbollah
moves secret
cameras from
runway 1-7 and
end the
militia's
equally secret
underground
communications
equipment.
Across Corniche
Mazraa, crowds
of shrieking
Sunni and Shia
Muslims hurl
abuse and stones
at each other. A
soldier comes up
to my car at the
crossroads.
"Turn round," he
shouts. "They're
shooting."
Lebanon seems to
feed on crisis,
need crisis,
breathe crisis,
like a wounded
man needs blood.
The man who
should be the
president is
head of the army
and the man who
believes he
leads the
resistance –
Sayed Hassan
Nasrallah of the
Hizbollah –
accuses Mr
Jumblatt of
doing Israel's
work while Mr
Jumblatt claims
the head of
Beirut airport
security,
Colonel Wafic
Chucair, works
for the
Hizbollah and
should be fired.
Yesterday, in
case you hadn't
guessed, was a
"general strike"
by opponents of
the Lebanese
government with
all the usual
chaos. Mr
Nasrallah is to
hold a press
conference today
and then we'll
all find out if
this latest
crisis is the
greatest crisis
since the last
great crisis.
Yes, a good cup
of cynicism is
necessary to
wash down the
rhetoric and
threats of the
past few days.
At its most
serious is the
incendiary
language in
which Lebanon's
politicians now
address each
other, the kind
of menacing
words that could
easily touch an
assassin's
heart.
Indeed, the
start of this
latest drama
might be traced
to the murder of
two Phalangist
officials in the
Bekaa town of
Zahle a few
weeks ago. The
murderer has
been named, is
linked to the
pro-Syrian
opposition and
is still at
large.
You could hear
gunfire
crackling across
Beirut all
morning. To top
it all, soaring
price increases
– even of basic
food – is
creating a
little
revolution in
the hearts of
many Lebanese.
Yesterday's
strike was
supposed to be
organised by the
General Labour
Confederation,
which is
objecting to the
government's new
minimum wage
offer of £171 a
month.
The darker side
of all this, of
course, involves
Beirut airport.
Mr Jumblatt's
claim that
Hizbollah has
installed
cameras beside
one of the
runways appears
to be correct.
Lebanese army
officers have
apparently
noticed the
cameras which
can monitor
executive jets
taking off and
landing.
However, the
apparatus may
well have been
installed
because the
Hizbollah
believes that
runway 1-7 –
which starts a
few metres above
the
Mediterranean –
could be used
for a small
seaborne landing
by Israeli
troops. There is
a persistent
rumour in Beirut
that the
Israelis were
about to stage
such an
operation
against the
Hizbollah-controlled
southern suburbs
of Beirut on 28
April but that
it was cancelled
for equally
mysterious
reasons. Was
this the origin
of the cameras
and of
Hizbollah's
unpleasant
suggestion that
Mr Jumblatt is
doing Israel's
work?
As usual, it was
the sectarian
content of the
street violence
which alarmed
the army – a
good many stones
were chucked
from high-rise
buildings near
the Cola bridge
in west Beirut,
the exact
location of
Sunni-Shia
fighting in
January last
year. Even in
the very centre
of Beirut, piles
of tyres were
set alight,
giving the city
a sombre curtain
of black smoke
that drifted out
to sea. So the
capital of a
country without
a president –
and for most of
the time without
a sitting
parliament – is
set to lose yet
more
international
confidence.
What is it about
Lebanon that
creates these
crises? Maybe at
heart, it is the
same old
problem: to be a
modern state,
Lebanon must
abandon
confessionalism
– the system
which provides a
Maronite for the
presidency, a
Sunni for the
prime minister's
seat, a Shia for
the speaker of
parliament, and
so on. But if
Lebanon
abandoned
confessionalism,
it would no
longer be
Lebanon, because
sectarianism is
its identity; a
fate which its
children do not
deserve but
whose country
was created by
French masters
on the ruins of
the Ottoman
empire.
Ironically, the
Lebanese Prime
Minister Fouad
Siniora now
rules – or tries
to rule – his
nation from a
building which
was once the
Beirut cavalry
stables of the
Ottoman army.
