Arab News

Chronicle of crime and impunity

Kidnapping of Saudi, despite a swift rescue, recalls Lebanon’s dark past: heists, abductions, hijackings

- Rawan Radwan Jeddah

Despite the record-fast rescue by Lebanese security services on Tuesday of a kidnapped Saudi citizen, the incident is yet another reminder of the many heists, abductions and hijackings that have plagued the Arab country since the 1970s.

Mashari Al-Mutairi, an employee of Saudi Arabia’s flag carrier Saudia who lived in the Beirut suburb of Aramoun, was abducted at about 3 a.m. on Sunday. The Lebanese Army’s intelligen­ce directorat­e found and freed him after a security operation on the border with Syria.

He was received at the Saudi Embassy in Beirut by Ambassador Walid Bukhari, who said in a statement: “The released Saudi citizen is in good health, and we thank the army and internal security forces. The security efforts confirm the Lebanese authoritie­s’ keenness to secure tourism security.”

News of Al-Mutairi’s abduction will have come as little surprise to millions of Lebanese who have endured decades of similar disappeara­nces, hostage situations and armed robberies — crimes that are again on the rise as the nation grapples with chronic economic woes.

In the first 10 months of 2021, the number of car thefts rose by 212 percent, robberies by 266 percent and murders by 101 percent compared to the same period of 2019, according to figures from Internatio­nal Informatio­n an independen­t consultanc­y based in Beirut.

Ever since the 1975-90 civil war, Lebanon has been a transit, source and destinatio­n country for arms traffickin­g. These same networks are today used to move stolen goods, control the black market and facilitate the burgeoning drugs trade — many of them controlled by the armed Shiite group Hezbollah, which continues to dominate Lebanese public life. “Any country that has a non-state actor within it is considered a ‘failed state,’” Salman Al-Ansari, a Saudi political researcher, told Arab News. “Lebanon has never been this dominated by a militia that works for an outside power. “The crime, drug smuggling, economic collapse, currency decline are only symptoms of the actual root problem, which is the lack of national sovereignt­y. There is no point in rectifying the symptoms as long as the actual root problem exists. It’s like hoping to treat a serious illness with a painkiller.

“Lebanon should change course and realize that their future is very dark if they allow a non-state actor to dictate its trajectory.”

Events in Lebanon today have echoes of the bad old days of the 1980s, when kidnapping­s, torture, murder and drug traffickin­g reached endemic proportion­s against the backdrop of the civil war, which devastated the country. Back then, Westerners were common targets. In 1982, pro-Iran extremists kidnapped Davis S. Dodge, then president of American University in Beirut, from the university campus. He was flown to a prison near Tehran and held until his release a year later. In 1984, Dodge’s successor as president of the AUB, Dr. Malcolm Kerr, was shot dead by two gunmen outside his office. The Islamic Jihad Organizati­on claimed responsibi­lity for the killing, citing the US military presence in Lebanon as its motive.

The same year, William Francis Buckley, a CIA operative working at the US Embassy in Beirut, was kidnapped by Hezbollah and later murdered. One of the reasons for his abduction was thought to be the upcoming trial of 17 Iranbacked militants in Kuwait. Several times during this period, whole planeloads of people were taken hostage. In 1984, a Kuwait Airways flight from Kuwait City to Karachi, Pakistan, was hijacked by four Lebanese and diverted to Tehran.

Due to unmet demands, the hijackers shot and killed American passengers Charles Hegna and William Stanford, both of whom were officials from the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, before dumping their bodies on the tarmac.

Less than a year later, on June 14, 1985, TWA Flight 847 was hijacked soon after taking off from Athens.

For three days, the plane went to and from Algiers and Beirut. US Navy diver Robert Stethem was murdered aboard the flight. In 1987, British humanitari­an and hostage negotiator Terry Waite traveled to Beirut to negotiate with the IJO, which had taken several hostages. However, he was himself abducted by the group and remained in captivity for 1,763 days.

Although Lebanon is no longer in the grip of civil war, the financial crisis which began in 2019, combined with the political class’s failure to establish a new government, have created an environmen­t of lawlessnes­s and desperatio­n.

Indeed, there are indication­s that the kidnapping of Al-Mutairi could have been orchestrat­ed by a criminal organizati­on with a hand in the production and trade of the amphetamin­e Captagon.

Lebanese news station MTV reported in recent days that a drug dealer known as Abu Salle, who is described as one of the region’s most prominent cartel bosses, was behind Al-Mutairi’s kidnapping. The Lebanese Army raid of a Captagon factory in connection with the kidnapping lends weight to this theory.

Although Lebanese officials were quick to condemn the kidnapping, there are concerns the incident could hamper efforts to normalize relations between Saudi Arabia and Lebanon, which have long been strained by the influence of Hezbollah.

However, Al-Ansari is confident the kidnapping will not obstruct progress on normalizat­ion.

“This could be considered a small obstacle in the way, but at the end of the day, Saudi Arabia is committed to having Lebanon back to the Arab fold in a way that it can have its own sovereignt­y away from Iranian hegemony,” he said.

In March, Saudi Arabia and Iran restored diplomatic relations under a Chinese-mediated deal. How this new arrangemen­t will impact the activities of Iran’s proxy forces throughout the region, however, remains ill-defined.

“It is still unclear what the Chinese mediation between Saudi Arabia and Iran will result in with regard to the Lebanese file,” Al-Ansari said. “It will deescalate the tension, but it will not solve the problem overnight.”

Although Lebanon is a long way from reaching stability, Al-Ansari believes Saudi Arabia “will work hard with the highest level of government in Lebanon to find a way to have political and economic reforms, combat corruption and drug smuggling, and have the right kind of governance.” Internatio­nal observers warned of a potential power vacuum after long-time president Michel Aoun left power in October. To this day, Lebanon’s parliament has yet to elect a new president, prolonging the nation’s political paralysis. “The Saudi ambassador to Beirut has been vocal and supportive in finding a solution to the power vacuum and pushing for reforms and appointing a government, because at the end of the day, Saudi Arabia can’t provide anything if there is no actual solidified government in Beirut,” Al-Ansari said.

“Saudi Arabia doesn’t want anything from Lebanon except for it to be politicall­y stable and prosperous. It will take a long time to accomplish these goals, but at the end of the day, it’s up to the Lebanese to decide their future, and the Saudis will be helping them with whatever they can.”

The released Saudi citizen is in good health, and we thank the army and internal security forces.

Walid Bukhari

Saudi ambassador to Lebanon

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 ?? AFP/file ?? Lebanon has endured decades of kidnapping­s, hostage situations, and armed robberies — crimes that began with the 1970s civil war and have been on the rise since the 2019 financial crisis.
AFP/file Lebanon has endured decades of kidnapping­s, hostage situations, and armed robberies — crimes that began with the 1970s civil war and have been on the rise since the 2019 financial crisis.

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