Funeral of slain Lebanese official sparks violent protest
Anger continues over assassinated intelligence chief
CBC News
Posted: Oct 21, 2012 7:29 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 21, 2012 11:43 PM ET
Lebanese soldiers fired machine guns and rifles into the air and lobbed volleys of tear gas Sunday at hundreds of angry protesters who tried to storm the Lebanese government headquarters in Beirut.
The chaotic scene in Lebanon's capital came in the midst of a funeral for a top intelligence official who was killed in a car bombing that many blame on the regime in neighbouring Syria.
Several hundred protesters made it to within 50 metres of the entrance of Lebanon's government palace, with thousands more behind them.
The gunfire appeared to push the crowd back. Army commandos marched into the streets wielding clubs. The crowd had marched from Martrys Square, where thousands of people had turned out for Brig.-Gen. Wissam al-Hassan's funeral.
As the battle raged, with protesters and security personnel pelting each other with hunks of concrete, metal bars and tear gas canisters, former Prime Minister Fuad Saniora appealed for calm.
"The use of violence is unacceptable and does not represent the image that we want," Saniora said in a televised address.
A powerful car bomb in Beirut on Friday wounded dozens of people and killed eight others, including al-Hassan, a Sunni Muslim who was close to the political clan of assassinated former prime minister Rafik Hariri.
His death has inflamed Sunni anger in Lebanon.
Anger at Syria's influence
The protesters believe the government is too close to Syria and Damascus' ally in Lebanon, the Shia group Hezbollah.
Many Lebanese have raised the possibility that the latest bombing in Beirut is connected to the civil war in neighbouring Syria, which has sent destabilizing ripples through Lebanon for the past 19 months.
Al-Hassan led an investigation over the summer that implicated a pro-Syrian Lebanese politician and one of the highest aides to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in plots to carry out bombings in Lebanon.
Former information minister Michel Samaha was arrested in August in an overnight raid on his home in Khenchara, Lebanon.
Even before Friday's bombing, the civil war in Syria had set off violence in Lebanon and deepened tensions between supporters and opponents of Assad's regime. The assassination has laid bare how vulnerable Lebanon is to renewed strife, threatening to shatter a fragile political balance struck after decades of civil strife — much of it linked to Syria.
Many of Lebanon's Sunni Muslims have backed Syria's mainly Sunni rebels, while Shia Muslims have tended to back Assad.Security was extra tight for al-Hassan's funeral in the Lebanese capital, where thousands of people were gathering in the central Martyrs' Square.
Lebanese men erect a poster in Beirut of Brig.-Gen. Wissam al-Hassan with Arabic writing that reads, the martyr of Lebanon's dignity. (Hussein Malla/Associated Press)Al-Hassan's body was to be buried next to the tomb of Hariri, who died in a 2005 truck bombing in Beirut.
Lebanese security forces set up road blocks and cordoned off the square ahead of the public funeral. Armoured vehicles and troop transports patrolled nearby streets.
Large posters erected in Lebanon describe al-Hassan, 47, as a "martyr of sovereignty and independence" and "the martyr of Lebanon's dignity."
In central Beirut, dozens of anti-Syrian protesters set up tents near the cabinet headquarters, saying they will stay until Prime Minister Najib Mikati's government, which is dominated by the Shia militant group Hezbollah and its allies, resigns.
Hezbollah is Syria's most powerful ally in Lebanon, which for much of the past 30 years has lived under Syrian military and political domination.
With files from The Associated PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- A man claiming to be the driver of a Jeep that struck and killed a spectator at a charity event in Edmonton says he is sorry for what happened. more »
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Voting in Karachi goes ahead a day after gunmen killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- US Virgin Islands environment head arrested for drug trafficking
- Federal agents have arrested the top enforcement officer for the U.S. Virgin Islands environment agency on drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with a cache of cocaine on a government patrol boat. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Canadian military gear stranded in Afghanistan
- A team of 15 Canadian soldiers has been dispatched to Kandahar on a month-long assignment to assess whether dozens of military containers are still seaworthy enough to be brought home. more »
- Iran hangs 2 men convicted of spying
- Iran's state radio says authorities have executed two men convicted of spying for Israel's Mossad and the American CIA spy agency. more »
- US Virgin Islands environment head arrested for drug trafficking
- Federal agents have arrested the top enforcement officer for the U.S. Virgin Islands environment agency on drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with a cache of cocaine on a government patrol boat. more »
- Senior Pakistani politician Zahra Shahid shot dead
- Voting in Karachi goes ahead a day after gunmen killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
The National
The Current
- Why thousands of people want a one-way trip to Mars May. 17, 2013 4:08 PM Nearly 80,000 people are eager to blast off on a one-way colonizing mission to Mars - but some experts believe no one is likely to get off the ground.
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- Rob Ford should resign if allegations true, councillors say
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield adjusts to 'earthling' life
- Email is proof Senate greenlit expenses, Brazeau says
- Police find bodies of 2 missing New Brunswick fishermen
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show

