TRAVEL

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Lebanon crisis (Reuters)

Last reviewed: 29-06-2007

INSTABILITY IMPEDES LEBANON'S RECOVERY
Years after the end of its lengthy civil war, Lebanon's ongoing instability is impeding its reconstruction and recovery.
15 years of factional fighting ended in 1990
Sectarian divisions remain
$2.8 billion damage caused by 2006 Israeli bombardment
Lebanon is a tiny country with a bewildering number of different religious groups including Christian sects, Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims and Druze. Many of these formed armed divisions during its 1975-1990 civil war - which also involved Syria, Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organisation - and are represented in a power-sharing government installed at the end of the war.
Lebanon also has a large refugee population - 400,000 Palestinians are housed in camps across the country. Lebanese security forces are not allowed to enter the camps under a 1969 Arab accord, leaving a security vacuum filled by Palestinian armed groups. These groups include the Al Qaeda-inspired militants Fatah al-Islam. The Lebanese government says that the group, which emerged late 2006, is a tool used by Syria to stir up instability. Both Syria and Fatah al-Islam deny any connection.
In May 2007, the worst internal violence since the civil war began as the Lebanese army engaged in a bitter struggle with Fatah al-Islam militants, who were based in the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared north of Tripoli.
Over 27,000 Palestinian civilians fled the fighting, while thousands more endured a humanitarian crisis within the camp.
Militias in Lebanon are in defiance of the Taif Accord that ended the civil war and a 2004 U.N. Security Council resolution calling for all groups in Lebanon to be disarmed.
Lebanon's biggest armed group, Hezbollah or the 'Party of God', emerged in the 1980s as a resistance force against the occupation of the south of the country by Israeli troops. Israel withdrew in 2000, and since then it has retained widespread support among the Lebanese for its role in defending the country.
Hezbollah, while backed with Iranian funding, is also a political and social force within Lebanon, providing healthcare and education for the country's Shi�ite community. Until November 2006, it formed part of the multi-confessional Lebanese government.
In July 2006, a month-long war with Israel resulted in a massive military bombardment of Lebanon by Israeli forces. The conflict re-ignited when Hezbollah kidnapped two Israeli soldiers and killed eight others in a cross-border raid. Israel retaliated with air strikes and ground offensives, destroying infrastructure and effectively cutting Lebanon off from the outside world. Hezbollah, for its part, launched waves of rocket attacks on northern Israel.
By the time a ceasefire was declared in August 2006, nearly 1,200 Lebanese, mostly civilians, and 157 Israelis, two-thirds of them soldiers, had been killed in the conflict. More than 900,000 Lebanese had been displaced and the country faced a humanitarian crisis.
Unexploded cluster bombs dropped by the Israelis in the closing days of the conflict have turned large swathes of farmland into no-go areas. The United Nations Environment Programme warned in January 2007 that de-mining of the bombs -which number as many as 4 million - could take up to 15 months.
A U.N. peacekeeping force that had been in Lebanon since the civil war was expanded to help the Lebanese army monitor developments in the south and allow humanitarian work to be done. In April 2007 it numbered 13,251 peacekeepers.
However, in the aftermath of the war, internal tensions within Lebanon worsened. A split emerged between those who backed the coalition behind the government led by Sunni Prime Minister Fouad Siniora known as March 14th and the Opposition, led by Hezbollah and followers of the Christian leader Michel Aoun.
In November 2006, the government came close to collapse when six pro-Syrian Shi'ite cabinet ministers resigned in a bid for a greater share of political power. The opposition's campaign has been accompanied by ongoing sit-in protests outside the government buildings in central Beirut.
The political division also turns on a disagreement over the role of Syria in Lebanese affairs, in particular about the formation of a U.N. tribunal to investigate the murder of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, who was assassinated in a car bomb in February 2005.
The assassination sparked massive anti-Syrian rallies by those who blamed Syria for his death. International pressure on Syria to withdraw its troops, which had been in Lebanon since 1976, resulted in the departure of Syrian forces from Lebanon in April 2005.
Since Hariri's death, a string of anti-Syrian politicians and journalists have been targeted, with the assassination of parliamentary deputy Walid Eido MP as the latest victim, in a series of bombings that accompanied the Nahr al Bared conflict.
Key facts
Population: 3.6 million (U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2006)
65 percent are Muslim, half of whom are Shi'ites. There is a large Christian population, and a sizeable Druze minority. [Reuters]
Palestinian refugees in Lebanon: 400,000 (214,093 in camps) (UNRWA, 2006)
Area: 10,452 square km (4,036 square miles)
Number of cluster bombs dropped by Israelis in 2006: Up to one million (U.N. Environment Programme, 2007)
Damage caused by Israeli bombardment: $2.8 billion

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