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Politics : WAR on Terror. Will it engulf the Entire Middle East? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19742)1/23/2007 12:19:56 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Respond to of 32591
 
How many did he kill?

Such bloodlust len. You really should reign it in



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19742)1/23/2007 12:20:14 PM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 32591
 
so len, is israel at fault here too:?

Two killed, 100 hurt in strike aimed at toppling Lebanon gov't

By News Agencies

Two people were killed and at least 100 more wounded Tuesday in clashes during a Lebanese general strike called by the Hezbollah-led opposition in a bid to topple Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's Western-backed government.

Lebanon's anti-Syrian majority leaders Tuesday accused the opposition of staging a "coup" against the government by blocking major roads.

Thousands of protesters blocked main roads in Beirut and around the country with rubble and burning tires as the strike began.



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"This is a coup d'etat. This is a revolt in all sense of the word," Christian leader Samir Geagea told the Lebanese television station LBCI.

Among the wounded were five government supporters, one of whom sustained serious injuries, in a gunfight with opposition followers in northern Lebanon, security sources said.

They said members of the pro-government Future movement and the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP) exchanged fire in the village of Halba.

In the ancient Christian town of Byblos, three people were wounded when a gunman fired on protesters, security sources said. Soldiers arrested the gunman and seized weapons from his house.

Two protesters were wounded in a similar shooting in Batroun, and a member of a pro-Syrian opposition group was seriously wounded in an incident near the mountain village of Sofar.

In other demonstrations across Lebanon, some scuffles broke out between protesters and pro-government loyalists, especially in Christian areas.

The strike escalates a campaign by the Hezbollah-led opposition to dislodge the pro-Western government, install a new unity administration and hold early parliamentary elections.

Protesters in Beirut, north, south and east Lebanon took to the streets at around 6 A.M. and began blocking roads. Smoke from burning tires billowed over the capital.

Hezbollah organizers, their faces covered in black masks, prowled on motorcycles, walkie-talkies clamped to their mouths.

Most main roads inside Beirut and leading into the city were closed, as were highways linking the capital to north and south Lebanon, as well as to the Syrian capital Damascus.

Several Arab and international airlines suspended flights into Beirut after the roads to Lebanon's only international airport and to the port in Beirut were blocked.

The airport remained operational, even though few workers showed up and passengers were unable to get there, sources at the facility said.

The national flag carrier Middle East Airlines (MEA) made no immediate announcement on whether it would suspend operations or not.

Many shops, schools and businesses were closed in Beirut but it was hard to tell whether this was in support of the strike or because people could not get to work past blazing barricades.

Lebanese security forces made sporadic efforts to open roads, but made little headway due to the crowds of protesters. They did not intervene in Hezbollah's south Beirut stronghold.

"This government only understands force and today is only a small lesson," protester Jamil Wahb told Reuters in the southern mostly Shi'ite suburb. "We will stay here until they give in."

Opposition sources say protests will last for several days. Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah told his supporters on Monday to be ready for more steps to press opposition demands.

Siniora's government has shrugged off the demands and is instead preparing for an international aid conference in Paris on Thursday that it hopes will yield billions of dollars for Lebanon's debt-laden economy.

Officials denied earlier reports that Siniora had left Lebanon for Paris a few hours before the strike began. "We are still here [in Beirut]," an aide said.

"Siniora out, down with the government," Hezbollah followers chanted as they lit tires in downtown Beirut, close to the prime minister's office.

The opposition's campaign, which started on Dec. 1 with an open-ended protest in central Beirut, has been largely peaceful, though one anti-government protester was shot dead in December.

Nasrallah said some government politicians wanted violence in Lebanon, which is still recovering from its 1975-1990 civil war. "We will move and if you want to kill us in the street, kill us," he said. "We will not draw our weapons against you."

The standoff has raised Sunni-Shi'ite tensions among Muslims in Lebanon, which has a delicate sectarian power-sharing system.

The government is backed by Sunni leader Saad al-Hariri and the opposition includes Shi'ite groups Hezbollah and Amal. Christians are split between the two camps.

Leaders allied to the government had called on Lebanese to go to work.





To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (19742)1/23/2007 12:29:00 PM
From: Ichy Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591
 
Thousands of Jews and thousands of Orthodox Christians and all the gypsies they could find..