Thousands answer Hezbollah call in Beirut (Agencies) Updated: 2005-03-09 08:43
Hundreds of thousands jammed a central Beirut square Tuesday, chanting
support for Syria and anti-U.S. slogans in a thundering show of strength by the
militant group Hezbollah — a rally that greatly outnumbered recent
demonstrations against Syria's presence in Lebanon.
The demonstration came hours before Syria began redeploying its troops within
Lebanon to an area closer to the two countries' border. US President Bush, who
rejects this as a half-step, said Tuesday that "freedom will prevail in Lebanon"
and demanded that Syria withdraw completely.
![Pro-Syrian protesters carry a big portrait of Syrian President Bashar Assad, left, and anti-American placard, right, during a pro-Syrian demonstration in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday March 8, 2005. The protest, organized by the Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah, is meant to counter the almost daily anti-Syrian protests staged by the Lebanese opposition that had drawn tens of thousands. [AP]](xin_490302090845500263403.jpg) Pro-Syrian protesters carry a big portrait of
Syrian President Bashar Assad, left, and anti-American placard, right,
during a pro-Syrian demonstration in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday March 8,
2005. The protest, organized by the Shiite Muslim militant group
Hezbollah, is meant to counter the almost daily anti-Syrian protests
staged by the Lebanese opposition that had drawn tens of thousands.
[AP] | But that was not the sentiment among the
protesters in Riad Solh square, where two huge banners read, in English: "Thank
you Syria" and "No to foreign interference." The latter was a reference to U.S.
and U.N. pressure on Syria — but not to the Syrian military, which the
protesters made clear they were happy to have stay.
"We're here for the independence of Lebanon but not for Syria to leave," said
16-year-old Esraa Awarki, who traveled to Beirut by bus with a number of
schoolmates from Sharkiya, in southern Lebanon. "Syria was helping to protect
us."
The sprawling crowds sang, waved a sea of red-and-white Lebanese flags and
burst into the national anthem, some touting posters with pictures of the
Lebanese and Syrian presidents. Throughout the afternoon, loudspeakers blared
songs of resistance and officials gave nationalist speeches.
"We are demonstrating here against foreign intervention in our internal
affairs, and we're supporting Hezbollah," said Maha Choukair, a 21-year-old
Lebanese University student. "Here we are saying thank you to Syria, not asking
them to leave."
 Demonstrators shout anti-America slogans as they wave
Lebanese flags and hold portraits of Syrian President Bashar Assad, right,
Lebanese president Emile Lahoud and slain former Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri in a central Beirut square, Lebanon, Tuesday March 8, 2005.
[AP] | Hezbollah, an anti-Israeli party representing Shiite Muslims, organized the
rally as a way of demonstrating that it will remain a powerful force in Lebanon
even if Syria leaves. The Lebanese opposition, which opposes Syria's presence,
has been trying to persuade Hezbollah to remain neutral in the country's
political crisis.
Hezbollah is the best armed and organized faction in Lebanon and enjoys
strong support among the country's Shiite community, which at 1.2 million is a
third of the population. Respect for it extends beyond the Shiites because of
its years of fighting against Israel.
The United Nations has joined the United States in calling for Syria to
remove its forces and for Hezbollah to disarm. Syria, whose troops have been in
Lebanon for more than a quarter century, says it will transfer its forces closer
to the border and discuss with Lebanese officials their eventual withdrawal —
but it has not given a date for a full pullback.
Lebanon's state news agency estimated 1.5 million participated in Tuesday's
rally, but that seemed high for the nation of 3.7 million. An Associated Press
estimate put the crowd's size at 400,000 to 500,000.
A large proportion appeared to have come in from the heavily Shiite regions
of the eastern Bekaa Valley and the south. In those areas, loudspeakers urged
followers to travel to Beirut for the protest.
Awarki, surrounded by dozens of fellow schoolgirls in gray uniforms and black
and gray scarves over their heads, said "at least three-quarters" of her school
had come to Beirut "because the sheik invited us" — referring to Sheik Hassan
Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader.
Nasrallah addressed the crowd from a balcony on a building facing the square.
"I ask our partners in the country or those looking at us from abroad, `Are
all those hundreds of thousands of people puppets?' Is all this crowd agents for
the Syrians and intelligence agencies?'" he said.
Nasrallah directly addressed Israel, telling it to let go of "dreams for
Lebanon."
"To this enemy we say again: There is no place for you here and there is no
life for you among us. Death to Israel!" he said.
"Lebanon is not Ukraine," Nasrallah said, referring to that country's "orange
revolution" last year. "If anyone thinks you can bring down a state with a few
demonstrations, a few scarves, a few shouts, a few media, he is suspect, he is
wrong."
Nasrallah also warned Washington against any military action to achieve its
goals.
"The fleets came in the past and were defeated. They will be defeated again,"
he said to the cheers of supporters wildly waving Lebanon's cedar-tree flag.
The weeks of anti-Syrian demonstrations in Beirut followed the Feb. 14
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Many Lebanese accuse Syria
and Lebanon's government of responsibility for Hariri's death; both deny any
involvement. At one point in Tuesday's rally, the crowd observed a moment of
silence for Hariri.
Tuesday's rally was far larger than the more than 70,000 anti-Syrian
protesters who filled the nearby Martyrs' Square the day before. That square,
just a few blocks away, was mostly quiet during the Hezbollah rally, and
Lebanese army armored vehicles blocked the roads leading between the squares.
At least one opposition leader said the pro-Syrian government pressured
people to turn out and some reports said Syria had bused in people from across
the border. But on a mountain road leading to Beirut, only one bus with a Syrian
license plate was spotted in a convoy of pro-Syrian supporters heading to the
capital and Hezbollah officials denied the charges.
Dory Chamoun, an opposition leader, dismissed Hezbollah's demonstration as
"muscle-flexing."
"Yes, we all know that Hezbollah has the material capability to mobilize such
large numbers of people and more," he told AP. "But the difference is that in
our demonstrations, people arrive voluntarily and on foot, not in buses pushed
by someone to demonstrate against something most of them don't even understand."
The pullback of Syrian forces from central Lebanon toward the border began
late Tuesday, when scores of trucks carrying soldiers and towing howitzer guns
left the Aley region in the hills overlooking Beirut and headed up the mountain
road to eastern Lebanon to mountaintops and down to the Bekaa Valley in the
east. The convoys included several tanks on flatbed trucks, witnesses reported.
Lebanese officials said the pullback would be completed by March 23. Deputy
Prime Minister Issam Fares said he believes the next phase, the full withdrawal
from Lebanon, will be "speedy" — but he did not give a date.
Lebanese Defense Minister Abdul-Rahim Murad told AP that the Syrian pullback
would include the main Syrian intelligence offices in Beirut.
The withdrawal of Syrian intelligence — a key part of Damascus' control — is
a central demand of the United States and Lebanese opposition. Washington has
said Syria's pullback to the border is not enough, demanding all Syrian forces
and intelligence out by Lebanese elections in May.
Syria has had troops here since 1976, when they were sent as peacekeepers
during Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war. When the war ended, the troops remained and
Syria has dominated Lebanon's politics since.
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