Kuwait Times

Hariri assassinat­ion: The day that rocked Lebanon

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BEIRUT: The death of Rafic Hariri is to many Lebanese what the JFK assassinat­ion was to Americans four decades earlier-everybody remembers what they were doing when the news broke. On Valentine’s Day 2005, the former prime minister who embodied the reconstruc­tion of the country after its 1975-1990 civil war was killed in a monster bomb attack on his convoy. The blast unleashed a ball of fire in the hotel quarter of downtown Beirut, shooting debris into the sky and shattering windows in a radius of nearly half a kilometer.

A suicide bomber in a white Mitsubishi truck packed with two tons of a potent military explosive called RDX had strategica­lly positioned himself, waiting for Hariri’s motorcade. He detonated his charge at 12:55 pm, a split second after the passage of the third car in the convoy, a Mercedes S600 that Hariri was driving himself. The whole of Beirut heard or felt the blast. Many thought an earthquake had struck. The smoulderin­g crater dug by the explosion was 10 meters across. One body was found 17 days after the blast, such was the devastatio­n caused by the attack that left 226 people wounded.

The country soon found out that among the 22 dead was the man whose stature at home and abroad had earned him the nickname of “Mr Lebanon”. The unthinkabl­e had just happened. Hariri was no longer prime minister at the time but still very much the country’s towering political figure and widely tipped to reclaim the job in upcoming polls. The assassinat­ion was not entirely a surprise, however, and there had been warnings since Hariri had cast himself as the spearhead of a drive to end Syria’s occupation of Lebanon.

Earlier in February that year, his friend then French president Jacques Chirac and then UN envoy Terje Roed-Larsen had implored Hariri to lay low. Among other foreboding signs, his friend and former minister Marwan Hamade had narrowly survived a similar attack on his convoy in October 2004. Fifteen years after the end of the civil war, Hariri’s assassinat­ion became the watershed in Lebanon’s post-conflict history. — AFP

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