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  • Beirut: Pro-Syria protest falls short of promised 1 million marchers

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Dec 1 2004

    Pro-Syrian protest falls short of promised 1 million marchers

    Thousands take to streets in Beirut to hear speakers denounce UN
    Resolution 1559 and U.S. regional policy

    By Nayla Assaf
    Daily Star staff


    BEIRUT: An estimated 200,000 pro-Syrian demonstrators marched in
    Beirut on Tuesday - well short of the government's promise to
    procure 1 million protestors - for the rally against the UN
    resolution demanding Syria's withdrawal from Lebanon.

    With banners condemning Resolution 1559 and pictures of Syrian
    President Bashar Assad and his Lebanese ally, President Emile Lahoud
    - tens of thousands marched from all over the country into Martyrs'
    Square in the heart of Beirut.

    Although 1559 is primarily directed against Syria, no similar protest
    was recorded there.

    "No to foreigners, no to colonization, yes to liberation, yes to
    Lebanon," Naim Qassem, the Deputy Secretary General of Hizbullah,
    said from a podium at Martyrs' Square.

    The resolution, Qassem said, "is an attempt to include Lebanon in the
    U.S.-Zionist project. This is a dream which we will not allow them to
    fulfill."

    "The country can accept the opposition and the pro-government
    parties. But it cannot accept those who bet on external powers," he
    added.

    The protest enjoyed the support of the government, and although
    Lebanese authorities did not officially organize the protest, they
    did everything possible to ensure good turnout.

    The protest closed the main arteries in the capital, shut schools and
    provided military escorts to marchers, which included ministers from
    Lahoud's supporters.

    Several ministers provided transportation for demonstrators from
    their districts.

    But in the Christian regions of the North there was little evidence
    of a mobilization.

    Some political observers suggested the protest could deepen Lebanon's
    internal divisions.

    Earlier, opposition politicians criticized the demonstration and
    warned of the consequences of Lebanon's defying the United Nations.

    "On the eve of his overthrow, Romanian President Nicolae Ceaucescu,
    like other dictators in Eastern Europe, was able to draw millions on
    the streets of Bucharest," former Foreign Minister Fares Boueiz said
    in comments published in the leading An-Nahar newspaper Tuesday.

    "But this did not prevent their downfall," he said, referring to the
    mass demonstration in Bucharest in 1989 that turned against the
    government and led to the downfall of Ceaucescu.

    The official assistance prompted local media to say the demonstration
    was "sponsored by the government."

    When contacted by The Daily Star, official sources at the Internal
    Security Forces said that the protestors numbered 1 million. However,
    observers said that number was more likely between 250,000 and 300
    000.


    Many of the protestors were school children.

    Elie Janho, 16, from Beirut, who was carrying a poster of Assad said,
    "I am here because of America; it doesn't want peace." While pointing
    to Assad's picture, he said, "I like him a lot. I think he is the
    best."

    Mohsen Aslan, 65, of Akkar said, "I don't have any political views. I
    don't have any requests. But the people were coming and I came with
    them."

    Amal MP Ali Hassan Khalil, pro-Syrian MP Nasser Qandil and Gibran
    Araiji, the leader of the Syrian Social National Party (SSNP), also
    spoke against the Security Council resolution.

    Other speakers included representatives of the Higher Shiite Council
    and the Sunni Grand Mufti.

    During the protest, a large poster of U.S. Ambassador Jeffrey
    Feltman, shown with a Star of David drawn on his chest, was
    destroyed, while other posters showed U.S. President George Bush with
    his face scribbled on.

    The parties, politicians and event organizers hired an estimated
    3,000 buses to transport citizens from impoverished areas in Akkar,
    near the Syrian frontier, the Bekaa Valley and the South.

    The main organizers of Tuesday's rally were the Syrian Baath Party,
    Speaker Nabih Berri's Amal Movement, the SSNP, Hizbullah, the
    pro-Syrian Lebanese Democratic and Phalange parties and the Armenian
    Tashnak Party.

    In the southern city of Sidon - the country's third largest city -
    the municipality provided transportation to Beirut to protestors who
    gathered at the Lebanese University campus and in front of the Ain
    al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp.

    In the qadas of Marjayoun, Bint Jbeil and Nabatiyeh, close to the
    border with Israel, followers of the Syrian Baath Party, the SSNP,
    Hizbullah and Amal gathered early in the morning for the three-hour
    trip to Beirut.

    >From Tripoli, Lebanon's second largest city and the stronghold of
    Prime Minister Omar Karami, thousands of protesters met around noon
    to head for Martyrs' Square in Beirut.

    On Monday night, until the early hours of Tuesday morning, in the
    largely Shiite Beirut suburb of Dahieh - Hizbullah's stronghold - the
    Islamic resistance party was calling on its supporters to take part
    in the protest.

    Also on Tuesday, Syria's official Damascus Radio slammed Resolution
    1559. While Syria was voicing its initiative for peace, Israel's
    Foreign Minister Sylvain Shalom said that his country had accelerated
    the endorsement of the resolution to weaken Syria, the station said.
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