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Bekaa residents look forward to Lebanese control

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  • Bekaa residents look forward to Lebanese control

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    April 26 2005

    Bekaa residents look forward to Lebanese control
    'We've had enough of foreign armies'

    Tuesday, April 26, 2005


    BEKAA VALLEY: As the last Syrian soldiers trickle out of Lebanon
    after 29 years of domination, residents of the Bekaa Valley are
    looking ahead to a new era of Lebanese self-reliance and control of
    law and order. As soon as the truckloads of Syrian soldiers had left
    for home, Mariam Majzoub started dishing out paint to erase the last
    vestiges of their presence.

    Her children, nephews, nieces and neighbors stuck Lebanese flags on
    top of the abandoned posts near her home in this tiny village,
    slapped whitewash on the walls and celebrated the Syrians' departure
    date in green paint: "Independence 2005, Sunday, April 17."

    "We started dancing in the street even before they turned the
    corner," said Majzoub, her plump face glowing with joy. "We could
    finally express ourselves, and there was nothing they could do about
    it. We have bad memories because the Syrians controlled the country
    through the mukhabarat (intelligence services)," she said.

    "We were constantly afraid, a lot of people went missing, some were
    tortured, but we hope that this is all history now," explained a
    neighbor who asked not to be identified.

    The man smiled as he added: "Once they leave, we can talk more
    freely. We will talk all about it. We waited for 29 years, we can
    wait for a few more hours."

    But after the Syrians with their dreaded intelligence services have
    gone, the Lebanese say they hope friendship and trade will replace
    domination and fear.

    "I cannot even find words to express our happiness, but it does not
    mean that we do not want good relations with Syria,' said Ali Hamdan,
    a trader in mobile telephones along the main highway leading to
    Syria.

    Syrian troops were packing up and heading out of Lebanon on Monday,
    restoring an air of independence to the tiny country.

    The Lebanese Army has deployed inside the border town of Anjar, the
    notorious headquarters of the Syrian forces in Lebanon which was
    declared a "military zone" Monday afternoon.

    "We want our own army to protect us, we have had enough of foreign
    armies. It is time for us to become really independent," said Ali
    Hassan.


    Salim Nassar was ecstatic. He finally recovered his house which had
    been occupied by Syrian forces for over two decades on a hilltop
    overlooking the commercial town

    of Chtaura.

    "I had to rent an apartment in a nearby building and pay the rent for
    20 years. Today, I took my son to see his ancestral home, which he
    has never been able to approach," he said.

    Nazira, the manager of a clothing shop on the main highway, said that
    "since Hariri's assassination two months ago, we have not seen a lot
    of tourists or Syrians because they are afraid to come here."

    "We hope that the Syrian withdrawal will be followed by stability and
    that tourists - including Syrians - will return," she said.

    "We want prosperity for the Syrians as much as for us. We want to
    have good neighboring relations, based on trade and not intelligence
    and security."

    In Anjar, Syrian troops toured shops and restaurants to bid farewell
    to their old neighbors for decades in this sleepy all-Armenian town.

    "We are very happy because we will get back the tourists who have
    been afraid to come here. We have great fish, good Arabic coffee and
    beautiful Islamic archaeological ruins," said restaurant manager
    Raffi.

    In a shop in Anjar, Syrian soldiers shook hands with the owner, staff
    and other curious bystanders. "God be with you," said the owner.

    "Come back to buy from us," said the employee, before adding in a low
    voice to a journalist, "as a civilian, of course."

    But Anwar Sharqiyyah, a 25-year-old farmer, felt that the retreat
    lacked dignity.

    "The Syrians helped stop the Lebanese civil war. They were important
    for the country's stability," he said, articulating the official
    Syrian line. "We wanted them to leave, but they should have left in a
    more honorable manner." - Agencies

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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