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Beirut's fragile peace hit by bomb
attack
Beirut -
Rafik Hariri, Lebanon's former
prime minister, was assassinated in a huge bomb attack yesterday that
killed at least nine others, injured more than a hundred and
threatened to shatter the country's fragile peace.
The murder of the billionaire
opponent of Syria's influence in Lebanon raised the spectre of a
return to violence 15 years after the civil war.
His killing was condemned by world
leaders and drew a sharp response from the White House, which directed
pointed remarks towards Syria. The blast left a five-metre deep crater
on Beirut's seafront, where restaurants were serving lunch. It tore
apart the armour-plated vehicles of Mr Hariri's motorcade and broke
windows up to a mile away.
A previously unknown group calling
itself Support and Jihad in Syria and Lebanon claimed to have carried
out the bombing, calling the attack the first of a campaign of
"martyrdom attacks" aimed at "infidels, renegades and tyrants".
In a video aired on the al-Jazeera
television network, a bearded man in a turban read a statement on
behalf of the group, describing the killing as "just punishment" for
Mr Hariri's close ties to the Saudi government.
According to the Associated Press,
Lebanese authorities identified the man as Ahmed Abu Adas, a
Palestinian who lives in Beirut's western district of Tariq al-Jadidah.
Security officials, speaking on
condition of anonymity to AP, said he left his house early yesterday
and never came back.
They said he was suspected of having
links with al-Qaida. A computer and other equipment were confiscated
from his house, the officials added.
It was not clear whether the
explosion was a suicide bomb, nor whether the explosives (estimated as
the equivalent of 300kg of TNT) had been packed in a car, on the side
of the street, or hidden under the road.
The assassination threatened to raise
tensions across the Middle East, where a Palestinian-Israeli ceasefire
last week had given hope of more peaceful times.
It could also worsen the fraught
relations between Damascus and Washington, which believes the Syrian
government is turning a blind eye to the flow of weapons and
insurgents into Iraq and undermining efforts to bring peace to the
region.
George Bush began his second term in
the White House by warning Syria that he would confront it for "harbouring
terrorists" within its borders and in Lebanon.
Yesterday, the White House came close
to blaming Syria's presence in Lebanon for Mr Hariri's murder,
describing the attack as "a terrible reminder that the Lebanese people
must be able to pursue their aspirations _ free from violence, and
intimidation and free from Syrian occupation".
Opposition leaders in Lebanon went
further, directly blaming Syria alongside the Lebanese government.
"We hold the Lebanese authority and
the Syrian authority, being the authority of tutelage in Lebanon,
responsible for this crime _ " they said in a statement.
Mr
Hariri, 60, a Sunni with dual Lebanese and Saudi Arabian citizenship,
had been prime minister for a total of 10 years, resigning last
October in protest at a constitutional amendment giving Emile Lahoud,
the Syrian-backed president, another three years in office. He joined
calls for Syria to pull its troops out of Lebanon and had been
expected to draw support away from the pro-Syrian government in
elections due to be held this spring.
President Lahoud described the
killing as "a dark point in our national history", as the government
called an emergency cabinet meeting late yesterday afternoon.
Lebanon's army command announced
forces were put on maximum alert and that soldiers on holiday were
being recalled..
Bashar
al-Assad, Syria's president, condemned "this horrible criminal
action", and expressed condolences to the families of the victims.
Mahdi
Dakhlallah, Syria's information minister, called the killing "a
criminal, terrorist action against Lebanon and Syria".
In Sidon, Mr Hariri's home town,
shops were shuttered. One group of people attacked a van with Syrian
workers inside, shattering its windshields.
Jacques Chirac, the French president,
called for an internationally supervised investigation, but in central
Beirut most people were blaming Syria though other theories involving
the Israelis and the CIA also surfaced.
The explosion tore through Mr
Hariri's convoy just before 1pm as it was travelling down the Corniche,
Beirut's famed coastal stretch of hotels and restaurants. Mr Hariri
was pronounced dead on arrival at the city's American University
hospital.
Local television showed footage of a
man on fire in the front passenger seat of his car fumbling with the
door before falling out on to the ground.
Several of Mr Hariri's bodyguards
were also killed and his leading aide, Basil Fuleihan, a former
economy minister, was reported to be in a critical condition.
Violence has been rare since the
civil war ended 15 years ago and many Lebanese who had fled to Canada
and the U.S. have returned. -- Guardian News
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