Lebanon’s
anti-Syrian opposition has called for a “Day of Rage” to coincide with the
funeral of slain security chief Wissam al-Hasan. Friday’s deadly bombing and
assassination risks putting Beirut on a collision course with Damascus.
Hundreds
of protesters in downtown Beirut rallied outside the office of Prime Minister
Najib Mikati on Saturday as calls for his resignation continue unabated over
his alleged role in the high-profile assassination. Thousands more had gathered
on Martyrs Square in the heart of the capital.
PM Najib
Mikati, who enjoys support from Hezbollah, Damascus and Iran, offered to step
down to placate those who accused him of playing a role in Friday’s deadly car
bombing. Lebanese President Michel Suleiman refused his resignation.
The March 14 coalition has also called for a “Day
of Rage” in the Lebanese capital on Sunday as with opposition leaders accusing
Syria of being behind the attack.
“Let
tomorrow be … a day of anger in the face of the butcher Bashar Assad and the
black regime that rules Syria with the power of fire and destruction and wants
to export blood and devastation to our country Lebanon,” the Lebanese Daily
Star cites MP Nuhad Mashnouq, an outspoken critic of Assad, as saying.
March 14
said that the protesters would call on the Arab League and the UN Security
Council to take the appropriate measures to preserve Lebanon’s stability.
“Such
measures should include deploying the international troops United Nations
Interim Force in Lebanon alongside the Lebanese-Syrian borders,” Mashnouq said.
Hassan
will be interned near the tomb of former prime minister Rafiq Hariri on Martyrs
Square, Internal Security Forces chief Ashraf Rifi told al-Mustaqbal
television.
Hariri’s
2005 assassination sparked the 2005 Cedar Revolution which resulted in the
withdrawal of Syrian forces from Lebanon. The March 14 coalition takes its name
from the date the revolution kicked off.
The
funeral will be held at the al-Amine mosque in downtown Beirut, near the
mausoleum, and will follow afternoon prayers.
Rafiq’s
son and former Prime Minister Saad Hariri insisted “everyone of you is
personally invited to attend the funeral on Sunday,” but said that the roads
should remain clear so that access to Marty’s Square will not be blocked.
MP Sami
Gemayel, from the Christian Phalange Party, also called on supporters to come
out in masse to Sunday’s funeral. Gemayel accused the Syrian government of
dragging Lebanon into a direct confrontation.
“We
tried to disassociate our nation from the conflict in Syria, but the regime is
challenging the Lebanese people once again by assassinating Hassan,” the MP
said.
Gemayel
drew a line in the sand, saying Lebanese officials must decide if they are
loyal to their own country or Syria.
“It's a
battle between Lebanon and a foreign country that is violating its sovereignty
and unity,” he added.
Gemayel
also said the March 14 coalition should once again become a resistance movement
that can safeguard both the Lebanese people and their state.
“We will
continue our struggle until we form a cabinet that is capable of protecting the
Lebanese, the independence of the country and a one that can order the army to
deploy along the Lebanese-Syrian border,” continued.
The
assassination is as a major blow the March 14 coalition, to which Hassan, a
Sunni Muslim, was closely allied.
Hassan
was also a close ally of former PM Saad Hariri, who fled Lebanon in April 2011
after his government collapsed in January of that year amid fears he would be
assassinated.
Hezbollah
recently accused Hariri and his Future Movement of supporting the Syrian
opposition.
“I say
to the Future Movement and to Saad Hariri: have mercy on Lebanon and its
people, have mercy on Syria and its people and stop funding and arming the
[Syrian] opposition,” the National News Agency quoted Hezbollah Deputy
Secretary General Sheikh Naim Qassem as saying last Saturday.
“[Stop]
managing armed groups in Turkey and involving Lebanon in the details of the
Syrian crisis. [Stop] sheltering gunmen in Lebanon and smuggling weapons from
Lebanon to Syria,” Qassem continued.
Hezbollah
and the Future Movement have routinely accused each other of meddling in the
Syrian conflict.
Hassan
died when an explosive-laden car detonated in Ashrafiyeh district of Beirut, a
majority Christian neighborhood of the Lebanese capital. Seven others were
killed in the blast, at least were injured, and surrounding buildings were
seriously damaged.
It was
the first car bombing in Lebanon in four years, when the country’s top
anti-terrorism investigator was killed along with three others.
The
attack sparked riots and protests which continued into Saturday, as thousands
of people across Lebanon demonstrated against the bombing in Beirut.
The UN
has condemned the attack calling for a thorough investigation to find the
perpetrators, while the US called the blast a“terrorist attack.”
Syria
also condemned the deadly blast.
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