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  • Change comes to Syria's Lebanon 'home'

    Change comes to Syria's Lebanon 'home'
    By Sebastian Usher

    BBC News
    April 20 2005

    BBC News, Anjar in Lebanon -- The road leading to the Syrian border in
    Lebanon's Bekaa valley is usually full of dilapidated trucks wheezing
    pollution as they struggle towards Damascus.

    But in the past few weeks, it has seen another, swifter kind of traffic
    as Syrian army vehicles rush backwards and forwards across the border,
    carrying the accumulated baggage - military and otherwise - of their
    30-year presence in Lebanon.


    Anjar has been the Lebanon home of Syria's feared intelligence service

    If you trace the vehicles back to their point of departure, you are
    likely to arrive in the lovingly tended, palm tree-lined main avenue of
    the small town of Anjar, just a few kilometres from the Syrian border.

    Squeezed up against a rocky hillside - beyond which lies Syria -
    Anjar's main claim to fame is a ruin from the early Islamic Omayyad
    dynasty, rising in gentle arches on the edge of town.

    Armenian legacy

    The other focal point is an Armenian church at the end of the main
    street, from where you can look across to the other side of the Bekaa
    valley, whose mountain tops are still white with snow.

    Next to the church is a modernist memorial to the heroic last stand
    of Armenians at Moussa Dagh in Turkish Armenia against the Ottoman
    Empire in 1915.

    It was from there that the town's inhabitants were finally brought
    to Anjar by French troop ships in 1939.

    The transplanted Armenians turned what was then a swamp into a town -
    though at a heavy cost, with many dying of malaria.

    It is a history that the town's current inhabitants are intensely
    proud of, showing visitors the original plan of the town and the deed
    to its ownership on the slightest pretext.

    The Armenian identity of Anjar remains intact, with street signs in
    three languages - Arabic, French and Armenian.

    Intelligence base

    But in the past 30 years, the town has had another, less
    tourist-friendly face.

    SYRIA IN LEBANON

    Military intervention began in 1976 30,000 troops in Lebanon during
    1980s, currently 14,000 Syrian forces helped end Lebanese civil war
    in 1990 and maintain peace Calls for Syrian withdrawal increased
    in 2000 after Israeli pull-out from southern Lebanon UN resolution
    calling for foreign forces' withdrawal in Sept 2004


    Q&A: Syria in Lebanon

    The Syrian army chose it as one of its main military bases in the
    Bekaa and - more disturbingly in the eyes of most Lebanese - as the
    headquarters of its feared intelligence services.

    The people of Anjar have grown to accept and even to benefit from the
    Syrian presence in the town, but their dread of Syria's intelligence
    operation has never gone away.

    It provides its own sinister focal point - to match the Omayyad ruins
    and the Armenian church - in a nondescript-looking house, guarded
    by an unsmiling phalanx of unshaven Syrian intelligence agents -
    mukhabarat in Arabic - in cheap leather jackets.

    An Armenian jewellery maker in Anjar's main restaurant, al-Shams -
    still frequented by Syrian officers - was loath even to say the name
    of the best-known inhabitant of the house.

    But he squeezed it out in the end with a defensive laugh: Rustum
    Ghazzali, Syria's head of intelligence in Lebanon and a man who has
    made the country's political elite quail before his threats.

    Deserted checkpoints

    Driving around the town with a young student from Anjar and his friend,
    I asked to take a photo of the house. They kept promising that I could,
    but by the time they felt it was safe, the intelligence HQ was just
    a dot in the distance. Anywhere closer, they were scared the Syrians
    might spot us.


    Like the Syrian soldiers, large numbers of Syrian workers in Anjar
    have been packing up

    But they did show me the Syrian troop positions speckled around Anjar,
    even hard up against the Omayyad ruins.

    They pointed out various houses that the Syrian top brass had
    requisitioned from locals - usually without payment or compensation.

    Outside one, a removal truck was loading up. The Syrian military
    presence in the Bekaa has already become desultory.

    Most of the checkpoints they used to man - aimed, most Lebanese
    believe, simply at bullying the locals - are now deserted.

    But the mukhabarat were still operating on the streets of Anjar,
    watching and waiting.

    The people of Anjar are ambiguous about the Syrians leaving.

    At their height, there were about 2,000 Syrian troops there - about
    half the town's population.

    The soldiers are poorly paid, so they have not been the greatest of
    customers for the more upscale local businesses, but they have been
    essential for the hundreds of small shops that line the road towards
    the Syrian border. Many of those are now closing down.

    Syrian labourers

    Even more important for the local economy have been the thousands of
    Syrian labourers, who have worked the fields and built the houses of
    Anjar for a fraction of what Lebanese workers would be paid.

    Many are now leaving with the troops, fearful of their future in
    Lebanon.

    This was brought home to me while I sat in the office of the chief
    official in the town, community leader Haroutian Lakissian.

    One of his Syrian workers came in to share his troubles. A friend of
    his had just gone back to Syria after receiving threats, and he was
    thinking about doing the same.

    But in the end, he told Mr Lakissian he would rather be beaten in
    Lebanon than be penniless in Syria.

    Just then there was a phone call for Mr Lakissian. A Syrian
    acquaintance wanted to know if it was safe to drive into Lebanon with
    Damascus number plates.


    Lebanese forces are starting to deploy in the town

    The Mr Lakissian reassured him, then expressed his anger that Syrians
    ready to spend good money in Lebanon should be scared off.

    Later, in the dark, cramped room of one of his Syrian workers,
    plastered with pin-ups of Lebanese female pop singers, a garage owner
    told me his workforce was leaving too.

    The numbers are vague, but several people in Anjar told me that about
    40% of the Syrian workers had now gone. The effect, they told me,
    was likely to be devastating on this year's harvest.

    The people in Anjar have one other big concern about the Syrian
    troops' departure.

    Loyal as they maintain they are to Lebanese nationhood, some still feel
    that the Syrians have given them an important measure of protection
    over the years.

    I asked the jewellery maker in al-Shams restaurant what the locals
    were afraid of.

    Of Anjar's Muslim neighbours was his answer - though he delivered it
    in more colourful terms.

    Others told me the same story. Their almost crime-free little paradise
    of pristine streets and civic pride was now at risk.

    'Need for protection'

    Mr Lakissian, the community leader, conceded to me that some of
    the people in the surrounding countryside accused them of being
    collaborators.

    He said there was also a rising tide of rhetoric questioning the
    right of the Armenians of Anjar to be in Lebanon at all.

    "The town needs protection," he said.

    The Lebanese army was meant to move in the day after the Syrians left,
    he told me.

    I'd seen some Lebanese soldiers driving through Anjar earlier.
    Apparently, they were scouting out the Syrian positions in preparation
    for taking them over.

    As I was leaving Anjar, one of the locals who had been showing me
    around - a twentysomething with a computer shop on the road to the
    border and a sideline as a DJ - told me that I should come back after
    the Syrians had left, as people would feel much freer to talk then.

    And he echoed what others in Anjar had said to me, that they were
    glad to see the Syrian troops go, but equally anxious to see the
    Syrian workers return.

    "Perhaps in a month or two when things have calmed down," he told me
    as we both looked down the now darkened road to Damascus, lighted
    up sporadically by one or two of the little shops that had stayed
    open late.
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