Tuesday, March 19, 2013

HizbAllah Death Stirs Sectarian Tensions in Lebanon

Hezbollah Death Stirs
Sectarian Tensions in Lebanon
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/03/sunni-shiite-tension-leban
on.html



By: An Al-Monitor Correspondent in Lebanon Posted on March 18.
إقرأ باللغة العربية

In the past few hours, Lebanon almost fell into the dangerous situation
against which officials have recently warned, namely the spillover of the
Sunni-Shiite strife plaguing many of the countries in the region, such as
Iraq,

According to informed sources, on the morning of March 16, the body of a
Hezbollah member arrived in the town of Mays in southern Lebanon after he
was killed in the fighting in Syria alongside the Syrian regime's army.

The exact location of the killing remains unknown, but initial reports say
he was targeted by a sniper while he was standing at a checkpoint set by
Hezbollah guerrillas near the Sayyida Zaynab shrine in Syria. A Hezbollah
force, estimated to comprise hundreds of fighters, is spread throughout the
Sayyida Zaynab region in the south of Damascus to ensure that the shrine is
protected by Shiite Muslims. The shrine was subject to several attacks last
year by fighters belonging to the Syrian opposition, mainly extremist Sunni
Islamists residing in the Qodm and al-Hajar al-Aswad neighborhoods (whose
residents are immigrants from the Golan) adjacent to Sayyida Zaynab.

As the news of the funeral of a Hezbollah member spread, a group of
supporters of Sheikh Ahmad al-Assir, (a hardline Salafist calling for the
fall of the Syrian regime, for the support of the Syrian opposition and for
the Sunnis in Lebanon to fight the injustice of Hezbollah, which is allied
with Iran and the regime in Damascus), established checkpoints in the city
of Sidon, (the capital of South Lebanon), distributed sweets to passers-by
and gloated over the death of a Hezbollah member.

Meanwhile, residents of Haret Saida (a suburb adjacent to the city of Sidon
and home to Shiite supporters of the two largest Shiite parties in Lebanon:
Amal and Hezbollah) learned about these checkpoints, which prompted some
youths to drive to the area of the mosque overseen by Assir and start
provoking his men. Afterwards, a masked supporter of Assir fired toward
Haret Saida. He was arrested by the Lebanese army and is under
investigation.

In the framework of this series of sectarian provocations and reactions, a
group of Shiite youths in Beirut beat and humiliated four Sunni preachers.
They were taken to Beirut's Makassed Hospital, which is affiliated with a
Sunni charity institution. Throughout the night, hundreds of Sunni youths
gathered in front of the hospital demanding revenge.

Assir supporters and other Salafist groups blocked some of the capital's
streets with burning tires in protest against the attack on the four Sunni
sheiks.

Security sources told Al-Monitor that last night's events (March 17-18) were
an additional wake-up call, confirming that the fears of sectarian strife in
Lebanon — similar to what is happening in Syria and Iraq — are very serious,
due to the growing sectarian tension and the severity of the Lebanese split
over the Syrian developments. Add to this that the overlap of the Lebanese
and Syrian situations is affecting Lebanon at the social, security and
political levels.

Read more:
http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/03/sunni-shiite-tension-leban
on.html#ixzz2NwM9q6U9


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