Nicholas Blanford in Beirut
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The centre of Beirut will be a sealed-off military zone today as MPs gather to elect a new president in a last-ditch attempt to prevent Lebanon from plunging into chaos and violence.
Émile Lahoud, the pro-Syrian head of state, leaves office at midnight today, but despite intense international mediation, no agreement appears to have been reached on a new president acceptable to the bitterly divided political camps.
The US-backed March 14 block, which holds a slim majority, has said that it will attend today’s session of parliament and threatened to elect a president from their own ranks if a consensus candidate is not found.
But the pro-Syrian Opposition, led by the powerful Shia Hezbollah party, says that it will boycott the election and has hinted it will respond by forming a rival government, a move that many Lebanese fear will lead to violence between heavily armed rival factions and tear the country apart.
That grim outlook appeared to draw closer last night with political sources saying that the continued lack of agreement could lead to the election being postponed, plunging Lebanon into constitutional limbo.
“Last day before zero hour: either a miracle or vacuum,” the An-Nahar daily headline said yesterday.
The foreign ministers of France, Spain and Italy are in Beirut shuttling between political leaders to push for agreement over the choice of president. In a further sign of international concern, President Sarkozy of France spoke by phone on Wednesday to Saad Hariri, head of the antiSyrian block, and Michel Aoun, the opposition candidate for president.
All three European countries contribute to a 13,300-strong United Nations peacekeeping force in south Lebanon and are aware that their soldiers would be at even greater risk if Lebanon fell apart.
Also at risk are MPs belonging to the March 14 block, more than 40 of whom have spent the past two months holed up in an annex of the five-star Phoenicia hotel in central Beirut. Four of their colleagues have been murdered since the June 2005 general election. Visitors pass through metal detectors and are escorted by bodyguards to meeting rooms.
The curtains are kept closed to avoid sniper fire. On the rare occasions MPs travel, they go in small unmarked cars and remove the chips from their mobile phones so that they cannot be tracked.
“The guys are all depressed staying here. It’s like a prison,” said Mosbah Ahdab, an MP from Tripoli, who moved into the hotel on Monday.
In an attempt to break the impasse last week, France persuaded Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, the patriarch of the Maronite church, to submit a list of candidates from which the rival factions could select a president. Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing system decrees that the president must be a Maronite. But neither camp is showing any sign of flexibility.
With Lebanon’s political woes inextricably linked to broader tensions in the Middle East, few expect an imminent solution, further complicating international efforts to secure a peace agreement at a summit in Annapolis next week.
The Lebanese Government is supported by the United States, France and Saudi Arabia, which seek to disarm Hezbollah and keep Lebanon within a pro-Western orbit – free from Syrian influence and an obstacle to Iran’s regional ambitions.
The Lebanese Opposition prefers to keep Lebanon aligned with Iran and Syria, distrusting Washington’s interest in Lebanon, which it believes seeks only to weaken Hezbollah and protect Israel.
“Everyone in Lebanon is waiting for the balance of power in the region to clarify itself,” Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Endowment’s Middle East Centre in Beirut, said.
The worsening crisis has resulted in a surge in black market arms sales as worried Lebanese protect themselves from an uncertain future. The weapon of choice is the AK47 assault rifle. A year ago the most popular version of this classic weapon, the 1977-vintage “circle 11” (named after the markings stamped into the rifle’s metal work), cost £250. Today it is worth about £450. “People are buying guns more than ever. They are expecting a war,” said Abu Jamil, an arms dealer.
The rise in arms sales has led to an increase in shooting practice in the Lebanese mountains, where the distant crackle of rifle fire is becoming common at weekends. The unrelenting political crisis and speculation that militias are being formed has left many Lebanese aghast at the thought that the country could be sliding into civil war once more.
“How can we even be thinking of war again? Have we learnt nothing?” Hadi Sfeir, 42, a shopkeeper, asked.
A civil rights group called Khalass – Arabic for Enough! - began a series of actions this week to highlight the disgust it feels toward the political class. “We are extremely frustrated. I don’t think the politicians care about what ordinary Lebanese care about like the economy and being able to live in peace with each other,” Carmen Jeha, an activist with Khalass, said.

History of conflict
1975 Bus attack by Christian gunmen kills 27 and precipitates a civil war among Sunni, Shia and Christian communities
1976-78 Syrian troops enter to restore order; Israel controls south
1982 US, French and Italian peacekeepers arrive, but withdraw after a suicide attack kills 296 of their troops
1988 Beirut splits between Muslim control in west and Christian in east; the latter declares war against Syrian troops
1990 Syrian air strike against Christian government leader, who flees to the French Embassy effectively ending the civil war
2000 Israeli forces withdraw from Southern Lebanon
2005 Prime Minister Rafik Hariri’s murder blamed on Syria. Street protests force Syrian withdrawal
2006 Israel attacks Beirut and south Lebanon after Hezbollah forces in Lebanon seize Israeli troops.
January 2007 Hezbollah calls general strike to force Government to resign
Source: Times archive
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We have to say Seniora failed. nothing was done to improve the life of the ordinary man. No one talks about the ordinary man : the Serveece car driver, the natour of buildings, the shoe shine boy, the school teacher, the waiter. Unless you improve the lot of these people no leader is going to get any where in terms of popularity. Who cares in Lebanon about the blind man trying to cross the street with the way the traffic moves. We should not wait for George Bush or any one else to improve the kind of problems which are lebanese and cheap to cure in many ways. why dont the Lebanese drive in the streets properly? it may seem a stupid question in this moment of our destiny but it mirrors a lot of what is wrong. Even if we have no money and the national debt is so high it is no excuse that the government of the day cannot or will not organise the basic things which matter to our daily lives and the lives of the underprivilaged. A president from the grass roots is ultimately what is needed.
Robin Hood, Nottingham, England
When you mention that in 1975 a bus was attacked by Christian gunmen and killed 27 , please don't overlook the fact that the bus was full of non lebanese palentinians. This is not to condone such acts but to clarify the fact that war started as a confrontation between some christian factions and the non-lebanese palestinians.
C, LA, US
Judging by the comments from Hezbolla supporters living here in the West, they all will be back to Lebanon after "Shia Opposition Party" wins power, in tears - oh great happiness, My Land is free of that brutal/illegal/immoral Zionist occupation!!
Dreams dreams. Most likely they will stay where they are closer to social benefits and hedonistic freedoms guaranteed by the superior industrial culture of the West.
On the other hand, there is little doubt that the fate of Lebanon has been decided, - one large Mogadisho- style mess in the North (Beirut), and Gaza-like resistance heaven in the South (of Litani).
Yuri, Cardiff, UK
I- AOUN popularity:
1)- Aoun has by far the largest people support: 71% of Christians & 65% of Lebanese.
2)- Recent polls show him by far the favored President: 65% to 85% (2005 elections, national pro stats, Al-Jazeera, naharnet, USJ,...)
3) He has ral & peaceful solutions (independance, Hizbullah arms, intl. tribunal, corruption...)
4)- He's a clean, frank and wise leader as history proves.
II- CURRENT FALSE MAJORITY (Hariri, Saniora, Jumblat, Geagea...):
They stole parlement seats in 2005 by:
1)- Syrian imposed election law that isolated major Christian votes
2)- then by quickly canceling constitutional council, not allowing for fair judgement on 10 contested seats (which alone change the majority)
3)- Also, they took Chia votes by lies & false promises (turned against Hizbullah afterwards).
III- SOLUTION:
1)- "false majority" must Obey to People Will.
2)- The US, EU & all countries should respect Lebanese, and stop supporting blindly the false majority.
Thanks
Jean Khoury, Paris, France
Michel Aoun for President. He is a strong leader. What has Emile Lahood done or given to Lebanon, in the time he served as a President. How many people/families have migrated overseas permanently????
We must put an end to all this. I want to go back and live in my country, my Lebanon. I don't want to be an immigrant elsewhere.
Antoinett, SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
Lebanon is for Lebanese, what have all the past political parties done for the Lebanese - nothing apart from its leaders getting rich.
On the other hand Hezbollah is Lebanese, they organize extensive social development programs, running hospitals, news services, and educational facilities.
Hezbollah currently operates at least four hospitals, twelve clinics, twelve schools and two agricultural centres that provide farmers with technical assistance and training.
Hezbollah does everything that a government should do, from collecting the garbage to running hospitals and repairing schools.
Syria should be out of Lebanon, as well as all other countries. The only party to stand up for Lebanon is Hezbollah so why is United States, France and Saudi Arabia against Hezbollah - Because they want a weak Lebanon.
I think the voters should vote for a President as well as there MP's.
mohsen, malaga, spain