National Post (National Edition)

Killing raises questions in Lebanon

Some linking mystery death, Beirut blast

- ISSAM ABDALLAH AND ELLEN FRANCIS

• When Joe Bejjany was shot with a silencer as he got ready to take his two daughters to preschool, it shocked not only his mountain village but a country already on edge.

No clear motive has so far surfaced for the murder of the 36-year-old Lebanese telecoms employee and freelance photograph­er on Monday. But that did not stop local media and people wondering aloud whether it was linked to an ongoing investigat­ion into August's devastatin­g blast at Beirut port.

Residents of Kahaleh, some 13 km from Beirut, say they want a swift investigat­ion into what they believe was a planned operation of some kind or another.

“This is not just about our village. Because today it's Joe, tomorrow it's someone else,” said Jean Bejjany, the head of the municipal council and a distant relative. “Are we going to have to protect our own houses and villages?”

A number of recent murky deaths have fuelled similar rumours of links to the explosion, even as security officials say they have no evidence of a connection.

Nearly five months since the huge stockpile of chemicals, stored unsafely for years, detonated at the port, that inquiry has yet to yield public results. The blast killed 200 people and ravaged swaths of the capital, compoundin­g a financial meltdown that has also triggered generalize­d fears over security.

Earlier this month, authoritie­s pledged to probe the death of a retired customs officer who was found dead in his home.

Jean, Kahaleh's municipal chief, said none of Joe's friends or family were aware of any threats or enemies and made no mention of anything that might link him to the explosion.

The two hooded gunmen took Joe's phone before sneaking away, he said. His daughters, aged two and four, found the dead body in the car minutes later.

Mounir Bejjany, Joe's godfather, described it as “an assassinat­ion.”

Relatives said Joe, who worked at a mobile service provider, had also photograph­ed military events such as parades as a freelancer. Other photograph­ers said they often saw him at such events.

Two security sources said the murder was carried out in a profession­al manner but the motive was unclear. The caretaker interior minister has vowed to find the culprits.

At the funeral on Tuesday, neighbours wept and threw rice as men in suits carried a white coffin to the church.

Joe's cousin, Gaby Feghali, said he had planned to emigrate with his family, like many others who are leaving Lebanon to escape the crisis. He said Joe got approval to leave for Canada about a week ago.

 ?? ISSAM ABDALLAH / REUTERS ?? Mourners carry the coffin of 36-year-old telecoms employee and freelance photograph­er Joe Bejjany at his
funeral Tuesday in the village of Kahaleh after he was killed assassin-style by two men with a silencer.
ISSAM ABDALLAH / REUTERS Mourners carry the coffin of 36-year-old telecoms employee and freelance photograph­er Joe Bejjany at his funeral Tuesday in the village of Kahaleh after he was killed assassin-style by two men with a silencer.

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