To follow up on yesterday’s post, here is more on the role of private security companies in recruiting and arming Future followers from the north. To the non-initiated, $350 may sound like peanuts, but the minimum wage in Lebanon is $200, soon to be increased to $233.33333.
civil unrest
May 11, 2008
“it appears the telecommunications network is important”
Posted by Ms. Tee under civil unrest, political discourse1 Comment
That is how Walid Jumblat resolved the issue in his press conference last night, by recognizing that the telecommuncations network is important to the work of “the resistance,” as he now calls Hizballah. You can hear the entire press conference at elnashra (Note: To Jumblat, as to his father before him, the mountain is a sensitive spot, and it is very obvious in this press conference.)
Beirut and the mountain have quitened down, so has the north after a rough night. Hizballah has opened Pandora’x box and let slip out all the monstrosities of war. They have apparently paid a gruesome price for it too, as two of their fighters have been knived and their bodies mutilated by Jumblat’s men (he assumed full responsibility for that – if true – in the press conference).
Now Wi’am Wahhab is out spewing menacing statements and the SSNP has issued an open threat to Hariri and Sanioura accusing their followers of gruesome acts in Halba (hat tip Tantalus). The open letter warns that if the perpetrators are not handed over, Hariri and Sanioura will be held personally accountable, regardless of any wider political settlement in Lebanon.
You can ask Riad al-Solh and Bashir al-Jumayyil. The sentence of the people was carried out against them by everyday SSNP members and without the need for a decision from the central party apparatus.
Remarkable how easily we slip back into old habits. How easy is it to slip out?
May 10, 2008
snapshots from the sectarian nation
Posted by Ms. Tee under civil unrest, political discourseLeave a Comment
On May 7, and after the longest ministerial session in Lebanon’s history, the government took the descision to remove head of airport security, Brigadier General Wafiq Shuqayr, from his position and to declare Hizballah’s communications network “illegal and constitutional.” Considering this a declaration of war, Hizballah led several of the opposition parties in a strategic military action meant to pressure the government to backtrack, cutting off the capital and placing it under the military control of the opposition.
As the death toll rises and the clashes now spread to the north and the mountains, the outcome remains uncertain. Throughout these events, the usual stream of words continues, with accusations and counter accusations, speeches and counter speeches, interviews and counter interviews. The avid news reader in Lebanon is by now used to the illogical logic of the sectarian nation that refuses to see itself for what it is. Following are a few snapshots from its most eloquent orators.
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In his press conference on May 8, Hassan Nasrallah defended the military actions of the party and its allies in the streets of Beirut saying:
We have not used and will not use weapons inside [Lebanon]… But weapons will be used to defend weapons against anyone.
نحن لم نستخدم ولن نستخدم السلاح في الداخل… ولكن السلاح سيُستخدم للدفاع عن السلاح في وجه اي كان
In other words, the offense was in self defense. It is true, the longer the conflict lasts, the more you resemble your most bitter of enemies. And I am not referring to the pro-government coalition.
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After the Ma`rab meeting of May 9, Samir Geagea, who is fond of rewriting history, sent a salute to Walid Jumblat “who resisted the Syrians for 28 years.” He further elaborated on this new version of history by recalling the siege of Beirut in 1982:
Beirut did not fall under Israeli invasion, and it will not fall today.
So, while Jumblat was resisting the Syrians for 28 years, Geagea was defending Beirut from the Israelis. But of course, we all knew that.
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If Geagea is the nation’s historian, Walid Jumblat is the hypnotist. Yesterday he expressed bewilderment at Hizballah’s overblown reaction to the government’s decision to “transfer” an officer. Only last week, the same Jumblat was whipping up fears of a major operation at the airport and linking it to Hizballah’s infiltration of airport security. His bewilderment did not extend far enough, however, to suggest that the decision be backtracked. It is, according to him after all, only a transfer.
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