Lebanon searches for
political unity as Syrian intelligence pulls out
by Nagib KhazzakaBEIRUT
- A deeply divided Lebanon woke up Tuesday to the task of securing a measure of political
unity in the wake of huge demonstrations by both the opposition and pro-Syrian forces.
Meanwhile, Syrian intelligence units began pulling out of Beirut, with members of the
service loading a truck with furniture and personal effects from a building along the
Mediterranean coast.
Upwards of a million people had surged into central Beirut Monday to press demands for the
complete withdrawal of Syrian military and intelligence units after a near-30-year
presence in Lebanon.
The rally -- in numbers -- eclipsed militant gatherings of pro-Syrian parties on Sunday
and last Tuesday, called by the Shia Muslim movement Hezbollah, and served to highlight
the political splits in Lebanon.
The catalyst for the latest turmoil was the assassination February 14 of former prime
minister Rafiq Hariri, widely blamed here on Syria despite denials from Damascus.
The killing also had political ramifications, with Syrian-backed Prime Minister Omar
Karameh resigning February 28 in the face of public fury only to be called back to the
premiership by President Emile Lahoud.
Karameh on Tuesday began consultations with opposition MPs in his quest for a government
of national unity, a bid so far rejected by his oppoents.
Karameh was notably to see MP Fares Souaid and to receive a list of opposition demands.
"We're calling for a transition government that will oversee the total pullout of
Syrian military and intelligence units and free legislative elections," Souaid told
AFP.
"If our demands are not met, there is no question of our participating in the
government. Monday's demonstration showed that the majority of the country is with the
opposition."
Military intelligence officers in civilian clothing supervised the evacuation of all three
Syrian intelligence offices in the capital, with streets closed off by Lebanese gendarmes.
Lebanese police near the seafront used a crane to remove two huge portraits of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad and his father Hafez.
Reaching an operational consensus here will surely require an understanding with Hezbollah
and its leader Hassan Nasrallah, the principal actors behind a movement that opposes
foreign pressure to oust the Syrians and is sympathetic to the role Syria has played in
Lebanon.
An editorial in the pro-Syrian newspaper As-Safir said Tuesday that "the opposition
has imposed its unambiguous superiority."
"The demonstration by Hezbollah made clear its conception of Syrian-Lebanese
relations as well as the balances of power within Lebanon ... Yesterday, powerful Lebanese
forces open to the Arab world and the international community sought to disrupt
Hezbollah's vision."
Opposition leader Walid Jumblatt in a television interview after Monday's rally argued
that "Hezbollah must know where Lebanese independence lies and put an end to its
political ambivalence."
Another opposition figure, who asked not to be named, said he did not expect positive
results from a dialogue with Hezbollah until after a full Syrian withdrawal.
"Nasrallah, who defends Damascus, cannot carry the torch for the Syrians after their
departure without the risk of alienating the majority of the Lebanese, whose support
constitutes the best protection for Hezbollah."
Addressing the throng Monday in central Beirut's Martyrs Square, just steps away from
where brother is buried, Bahiya Hariri, a deputy from the southern city of Sidon, reached
out to Nasrallah and Hezbollah, crediting them with leading a campaign to drive Israeli
troops from southern Lebanon.
"Let us merge the two struggles into one," she said, "resistance to
occupiers and the construction struggle to build Lebanon." |