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  • Lebanese say breath easy as last Syrians leave

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    April 26 2005

    Lebanese say breath easy as last Syrians leave

    Source: Reuters

    By Lin Noueihed

    ANJAR, Lebanon, April 26 (Reuters) - For almost 30 years Anjar's
    claim to fame was not the ruins of an 8th century city but the
    headquarters of the Syrian intelligence that once brokered Lebanese
    politics from the border town.

    As the last Syrian soldiers and spies trundled home on Tuesday,
    residents of Lebanon's border towns said they could finally stop
    looking over their shoulder.

    "I couldn't breath easy until they were gone," said Karam Yousef, who
    works in a gift shop at Anjar's archeological site.

    "My brother quarreled with the Syrian labourers working on his farm
    and they threatened to put the intelligence on him. They would just
    come and take whatever they wanted from the fields. Who dared say
    no?" he said.

    Fresh-faced Lebanese soldiers in fatigues now stand guard outside the
    intelligence headquarters, replacing the Syrian agents in faded
    leather jackets that once warded off visitors.

    But locals still drop into a whisper when they joke that Lebanon's
    governments have been made and broken in Anjar for years, that it was
    Syria's capital in Lebanon, not Beirut.

    Rustum Ghazaleh, the head of Syrian intelligence in Lebanon, lived
    there from 2002, until he went home on Monday, effectively ending
    Syria's 29-year military and security presence.

    His predecessor Ghazi Kanaan was based in Anjar, which is closer to
    Damascus than Beirut, for 20 years.

    Syrian troops and officers occupied property belonging to Lebanese.
    They abandoned villas in the mountains weeks ago, but remained in the
    eastern Bekaa Valley until this week.

    "Twenty-eight years ago, the Syrians asked for a house to use for a
    few months," said Andre Hosepian a grocer in Anjar.

    "A few days ago, a Syrian officer invited me for a cup of coffee and
    gave me the key back. I had two houses the Syrians stayed in
    rent-free all those years. Now I have both back."

    BREATHING EASY

    Locals watched until the last of the Syrian troops had crossed the
    border before a small group unfurled a couple of Lebanese flags and
    broke into a traditional dabke dance.

    "I am relieved because there is no one they did not harm," said
    Mahmoud Laiss, who runs an insurance and exchange shop on the Masnaa
    border post.

    "They would go into a shop to buy something and insist on paying
    below cost or nothing at all. If you try to say no you don't know
    what might happen. Let them go and leave us alone."

    Another insurance salesman standing nearby chipped in to ask when the
    Syrians would release three men from the nearby town of Majdal Anjar,
    whom he said had been jailed in Syria for over 20 years. Syria says
    it has no Lebanese detainees in its jails.

    But residents of Anjar itself say they had no quarrel with the
    Syrians, who protected it through the 1975-1990 civil war.

    Living at the nerve-centre of Syrian influence in Lebanon had its
    benefits. Anjar was safe. Its residents, mostly of Armenian descent,
    were protected from an old land dispute with Muslims.

    But most hoped for a fresh start now the Syrians were gone.

    "When I used to bring groups of tourists here, they would see all
    these Syrians and get confused. They would ask are we in Lebanon or
    Syria?" said Henri Baghdassarian, a tour guide. "Now, how do you
    explain a thing like that?"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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