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Hopes dim for early Syrian exit
from Lebanon
Damascus -
Prospects for an early withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon
faded yesterday when the countries' presidents agreed only a partial
time-table which appeared to fall well short of international demands.
A pullback to the eastern part of
Lebanon will be completed by the end of this month, according to
yesterday's agreement, but no date has been set for all the 14,000
Syrian troops to leave.
As Syria's president, Bashar al-Assad,
met Emile Lahoud, the Syrian-backed Lebanese president, in Damascus,
tens of thousands of anti-Syrian demonstrators took to the streets of
Beirut, chanting: "Freedom! Sovereignty! Independence!"
Syria and its allies in Lebanon argue
that a redeployment to the Beka'a valley complies with the 1989 Taif
accord that gave Syria a role in helping to stabilise the country
after its 15-year civil war.
Under the accord, an eventual full
withdrawal is a matter to be agreed between Syria and Lebanon.
This is the route that Syria is
attempting, belatedly, to follow, though it faces intense
international pressure for a full and immediate withdrawal in
compliance with UN security council resolution 1559 which was approved
last year.
The U.S. wants all Syrian forces out
of Lebanon before May, when the country is due to hold elections.
"We stand with the Lebanese people
and the Lebanese people, I think, are speaking very clearly," said the
White House spokesman Scott McClellan, who called the Damascus
agreement a half measure. He added: "They want a future that is
sovereign, independent and free from outside influence and
intimidation."
The statement from yesterday's
meeting in Damascus that redeployment to the Beka'a could take more
than three weeks poured cold water on remarks by the Lebanese defence
minister, who on Sun day said it could be completed in two or three
days.
Within a "maximum" of one month from
the date of withdrawal to the Beka'a, a joint military committee will
"define the size and duration of the presence of the Syrian forces"
and "establish the relationship between these forces and Lebanese
authorities", the statement said.
"At the end of the agreed-upon
duration for the presence of Syrian forces, the governments of Syria
and Lebanon will agree on completion of the withdrawal of the
remaining Syrian forces."
These arrangements have done little
to clarify the likely time frame. In theory the process could be quite
short, but it could also drag on until after the elections in May.
Although a former Lebanese general,
Michel Aoun, an exiled anti-Syrian figure, dismissed the plans as "manoeuvring
to win time", some initial movement by the Syrian military was evident
yesterday.
In the Lebanese mountain towns of
Hamana, Mdairij, Soufar and Aley, Syrian troops were dismantling
communications equipment or loading personal belongings and military
gear on to military lorries, witnesses said. Some lorries with
equipment and a few dozen soldiers from several positions then headed
towards the border. Other soldiers stayed behind.
Lebanese army troops in lorries
waited near a Syrian military post at Dahr al-Wahsh, east of Beirut,
as the Syrian troops prepared to leave, witnesses told Reuters.
The estimated 50,000 to 100,000
people who gathered in Martyrs' Square at lunchtime were more than
double the size of the demonstration a week earlier that helped to
bring down the Syrian-backed government of the prime minister, Omar
Karami.
Waving red and white Lebanese flags
and with music blaring from loudspeakers, they marched to the spot
where the former prime min ister, Rafik Hariri, was assassinated on
February 14, an atrocity that has been widely blamed on Syria.
At one point the marchers, 15 or 20
deep, filled the length of the route. Onlookers waved flags from
balconies.
Today Hizbullah, the Shia
organisation backed by Syria and Iran, is due to hold a rival rally in
central Beirut to "thank" Syria for helping Lebanon.
Some of yesterday's marchers thought
that Hizbullah, whose leader, Hassan Nasrallah, on Sunday announced
plans for the rally, might muster an even larger crowd.
"They are very organised, in a
different sort of way," said Laila, a 19-year-old student.
Although Hizbullah does not directly
oppose a Syrian withdrawal, it is affected by another part of security
council resolution 1559, which calls for the dismantling of all
militias in Lebanon.
Some Lebanese fear that as pro- and
anti-Syrian rivalries emerge on the streets there could be violence,
especially if a withdrawal is prolonged. On Sunday night one person
was injured when pro-Syrian gunmen opened fire in Beirut for the
second night running. -- Guardian News
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