Bombing in Beirut Caps Day of Violence in Lebanon

BEIRUT – Lebanon was rocked by vio­lence today with dozens killed in fight­ing in the country’s north and a car bomb in a pre­dom­i­nantly Chris­t­ian neigh­bor­hood of Beirut that killed one per­son and wounded up to a dozen. The day started with clashes in the north­ern city of Tripoli between the Lebanese Army and the Pales­tin­ian mil­i­tant group, Fatah al-Islam, which the Lebanese gov­ern­ment says is backed by Syria and shares an ide­ol­ogy with al Qaida. At least 22 sol­diers and 17 mil­i­tants were killed in fight­ing that lasted through much of the day.
But by the time calm had been imposed up north, a car bomb shat­tered win­dows and col­lapsed a build­ing in the east Beirut neigh­bor­hood of Acrafiyeh. Reports say a woman was killed and about a dozen wounded.
The bomb was placed in a car lot next to the pop­u­lar ABC Achrafiyeh mall, and the tim­ing of the blast — at 11:40 p.m. — suggested that its intent was to cause panic and fear among the crowd exit­ing the movie the­aters at the mall.
“It was just to scare peo­ple,” said a man in the car lot who declined to be iden­ti­fied. “If they really wanted to cause dam­age, they would have put it in the park­ing garage.”
As the AP reports:

The bomb left a crater about 4 feet deep and 9 feet wide, and police said the explo­sives were esti­mated to weigh 22 pounds. The blast — heard across the city — gut­ted cars, set vehi­cles ablaze and shat­tered store and apart­ment windows.

Hamid and Clau­dine Sal­iba, both 39, live across the street from the park­ing lot where the car exploded. “In Lebanon, you expect any­thing,” said Clau­dine, and after today’s vio­lence up north, she and her hus­band were on guard. “But not in Achrafiyeh!”
They spoke from Hamid’s mother’s home, which is two doors down from their own, and the dev­as­ta­tion in the house was near total. Grace­ful Ottoman win­dows jambs were ripped from the walls and heavy doors torn from their hinges. Luck­ily for Hamid, his mother had left the house on vaca­tion two days pre­vi­ously, so there were no injuries.
This is the lat­est in a string of car bombs that many in Lebanon sus­pect is aimed at desta­bi­liz­ing the coun­try so that Syria can re-impose its hege­mony it enjoyed for 29 years.
Ini­tially wel­comed as pro­tec­tors dur­ing Lebanon’s 15-year-long civil war, Syr­ian main­tained an iron con­trol over Lebanon after the war ended, effec­tively occu­py­ing it from 1990 – 2005, when it with­drew its troops. The with­drawal was forced upon Dam­as­cus fol­low­ing mas­sive pop­u­lar protests, which the Lebanese call the “inde­pen­dence upris­ing,” in the wake of the assas­si­na­tion of for­mer Prime Min­is­ter Rafik Hariri. Many in Lebanon blame Syria for that killing and the waves of vio­lence that have fol­lowed.
Lebanon has been on a knife’s edge since Decem­ber of last year when Hezbol­lah and its allies, who sup­port Syria, pulled out of the gov­ern­ment in protest over leg­is­la­tion form­ing an inter­na­tional tri­bunal that would han­dle the Hariri case. Syria and its sup­port­ers vehe­mently oppose the tri­bunal, forc­ing the Lebanese gov­ern­ment to peti­tion the United Nations to impose the tri­bunal under Chap­ter 7 of the UN Char­ter, mean­ing it does not require Lebanese par­lia­men­tary approval. The tri­bunal is widely expected to indict high-level mem­bers of the Syr­ian regime, includ­ing the brother-in-law of Syr­ian Pres­i­dent Bashar al-Assad.
Tonight’s bomb­ing — which may or may not be tied to the fight­ing in the north — could be seen as a mes­sage that Syria’s agents in Lebanon are pre­pared to unleash more vio­lence if the tri­bunal is imposed on Lebanon.

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