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Lebanon heads down road to democracy as Syrians go home

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  • Lebanon heads down road to democracy as Syrians go home

    the Times/UK
    April 26, 2005


    Lebanon heads down road to democracy as Syrians go home

    >From Nicholas Blanford in Anjar, Bekaa Valley


    SYRIAN troops complete their withdrawal from Lebanon today, ending
    almost 30 years of occupation and paving the way for the country's
    first free and fair elections in a generation. Positions were
    bulldozed and checkpoints dismantled as the last tanks and artillery
    guns were removed for the short trip home. Lorries filled with troops
    and equipment belched black diesel smoke as they ground up the hills
    of the eastern Bekaa. Green military buses festooned with Syrian flags
    and portraits of President Assad ferried soldiers across the border.



    A monument dedicated to Syrian soldiers who died in Lebanon's wars
    will be unveiled at a ceremony this morning in the Bekaa Valley town
    of Rayak formally marking an end to Syria's military presence.

    With almost all Syrian troops gone from Lebanon, Rustom Ghazale, the
    head of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon, the mukhabarat, has
    vowed to be the last soldier to leave. Once his vehicle crosses the
    border at Masnaa today, the military road connecting the two countries
    will be closed.

    Jamil Sayyed, Lebanon's feared security chief and a close ally of
    Damascus, announced his resignation yesterday. Raymond Azar, chief of
    Lebanese military intelligence, was reported to have fled to
    France. The security chiefs stand accused of involvement in the murder
    of Rafik Hariri, a former Lebanese Prime Minister, whose death heaped
    pressure on Syria to withdraw.

    A Syrian army officer, a camera on his shoulder, stood by the main
    road at Masnaa filming each vehicle as it passed, capturing for
    posterity what many Syrians regard as a humiliating retreat. `I am
    sorry to leave like this because the Syrian and Lebanese people are
    brothers,' the officer said. `We would have liked to stay.'

    But in the nearby ethnic Armenian town of Anjar, headquarters since
    1976 of Syria's military intelligence, there was barely disguised
    delight. `We are very happy to see them go,' Rafi Tamorian, 25,
    said. `They might be our brothers, but they have been treading on our
    hearts for too long.'

    The intelligence headquarters lies beside the ruins of an 8th-century
    town built by the Islamic Umayyad dynasty. The Syrians had used the
    ancient stone dwellings as billets.

    Around one corner of the site lay empty cans and plastic water
    bottles, and laundry had been hung up to dry in the warm spring
    sunshine. Two intelligence officers, unshaven and dressed in black
    leather jackets, light cotton trousers and sandals ' the attire of the
    Syrian mukhabarat ' crouched at a fire brewing tea, their rifles
    leaning against a wall. The sight made a bizarre contrast to the
    graceful columns and arches of the nearby palace of the Umayyad caliph
    Al-Walid Ibn Abdel Malik, an earlier Damascus-based ruler of the
    Levant.

    Nicolas Hergilian, who runs a stall by the ruins, said: `Since 1976,
    Anjar ceased being a centre of civilisation and became a centre for
    the mukhabarat.

    In Majdal Anjar, a Sunni town in the eastern Bekaa well known for
    supplying volunteers to the Iraqi insurgency, pictures of the murdered
    Hariri cover walls, shop windows and car windscreens, mute testimony
    to anti-Syrian passions. `We used to be quiet because we are close to
    the border but when the Opposition held the (anti-Syrian)
    demonstrations in Beirut, the village exploded and we all travelled to
    Beirut to join in,' Khaled Yassin, a shopkeeper, said. `We want our
    independence.'

    A UN team arrives in Damascus today on a mission to ensure that Syrian
    forces and intelligence personnel have fully departed, in compliance
    with UN Resolution 1559.

    During the 1990s, 30,000 Syrian soldiers were in Lebanon. By the start
    of this year, redeployments since 2000 had whittled the number down to
    14,000. Although Resolution 1559 was adopted last September, the
    Syrians continued to stall on a total withdrawal. It was Hariri's
    murder that precipitated the final pullout.

    The end of Syrian domination heralds uncertainty. With a new
    Government formed last week and parliamentary elections scheduled for
    May, the pro-Syrian establishment in Beirut is unravelling.
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