Arab News

Lebanon on a knife edge

Killing of party official raises specter of renewed sectarian strife and surge in hostility to Syrian refugees, experts warn

- Najia Housari

Almost five decades since the Lebanese civil war of 1975-1990 began, reactions to the kidnap and subsequent murder this week of Pascal Suleiman, an official of the Lebanese Forces, show the country’s fragile peace remains on a knife edge.

Suleiman, a political coordinato­r in the Byblos area, also known as Jbeil, north of Beirut, was killed in what the Lebanese army said was a carjacking by Syrian gang members, who then took his body to Syria.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a monitor of the country’s civil war, said that Suleiman’s body was dumped in a border area where Hezbollah holds sway, adding that he “was wrapped in a blanket and had been hit on the head and chest with a hard object.”

Even though a formal investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces of Suleiman’s death is still ongoing, the Lebanese Forces — a Christian political party and former militia opposed to the Syrian government and its ally Hezbollah — has already branded it a “political assassinat­ion.”

In a statement, the Lebanese Forces said that Hezbollah, Lebanon’s powerful Iran-backed Shiite militia and political movement, “has impeded the state’s role and its effectiven­ess, paving the way for weaponsbea­ring gangs.”

The Phalange Party and the Free Patriotic Movement issued statements in solidarity with the Lebanese Forces, currently the biggest party in parliament, blaming “uncontroll­ed weapons and uncontroll­ed security” for Suleiman’s death.

“The informatio­n leaked from the investigat­ion continues to cause more speculatio­n,” Mona Fayad, a Lebanese academic and a prominent Shiite opponent of Hezbollah, told Arab News. “Suleiman’s murder was initially thought to be car theft, although it took place on a remote road where cars rarely pass. “Suleiman’s political affiliatio­ns also come into play, and the fact that the killers took him to an area controlled by Hezbollah on the Lebanese-Syrian border. The perpetrato­rs were able to sneak past all official security points without anyone suspecting them.”

Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s secretary-general, responded to the allegation­s of his group’s involvemen­t by accusing the Lebanese Forces, the Phalange Party, “and those who orbit them,” of being “owners of chaos looking for a civil war.”

In a country already fraught with political divisions, economic woes and the prospect of another potentiall­y devastatin­g war with Israel, many fear the killing could provoke an escalation reminiscen­t of the civil war.

“The security situation in Lebanon has deteriorat­ed since the beginning of the economic crisis,” Mohanad Hage Ali, deputy director for research at the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center, told Arab News.

“It is likely to deteriorat­e further as a result of the widespread increase in crime and the weakness of the security forces as part of the military turned into part-timers to compensate for their income after declines in salaries.”

Indeed, even if Suleiman’s death was in fact the result of a carjacking, as the Lebanese army suspect, the incident reflects Lebanon’s institutio­nal decline, growing insecurity, and the collapse of the rule of law. “Crimes have increased as a result of the economic crisis and the burden of Syrian refugees and the transforma­tion of the Lebanese economy into cash money, which encourages the exploitati­on of people,” Hage Ali said.

Suspicions about the genuine cause of death remain, however. Suleiman’s case has parallels with the death of Elias Al-Hasrouni, another Lebanese Forces coordinato­r, who was killed in what was dubbed a “planned” accident in a Hezbollah-controlled area.

“The problem in Lebanon is that there is a lack of political horizon and there is a feeling of loss of hope from the political class, which leads to accepting that this reality will be permanent and raises the level of tensions,” Hage Ali said. “Since the beginning of the economic collapse, we have seen manifestat­ions of self-security. The matter has become a lived reality, meaning that hybrid security is met with armed militia forces in the regions.

“Any crime that occurs is followed by a state of shock, which is what happened today as a result of Suleiman’s murder, but I believe that after a year, for example, crime will become a part of daily life. “Lebanon has become a mixture of the Argentinia­n situation in terms of economic collapse and the Colombian situation in terms of the extent of crime which will cause more trouble for Hezbollah.” As Suleiman was allegedly killed by Syrian nationals, some of whom have been arrested by Lebanese security services, the incident has raised the prospect of further hostility against Lebanon’s Syrian refugee community.

Just hours after Suleiman’s death was announced, the Lebanese Forces called for restraint after several of its supporters attacked Syrians and evicted them from their homes in Beirut and other regions.

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, says that more than 800,000 Syrian refugees are registered with the body in Lebanon. In a press conference following Suleiman’s murder, Lebanon’s acting interior minister, Bassam Mawlawi, said that security forces had been instructed “to strictly enforce Lebanese laws on Syrian refugees. “We will become stricter in granting residency permits and dealing with those (Syrians) residing in Lebanon illegally,” he said, calling for measures “limiting the presence of Syrians” in the country.

The scapegoati­ng of Syrian refugees for Lebanon’s ills has become commonplac­e, with policies designed to hamper their integratio­n into Lebanese society and compel them to return to Syria, even if that means facing persecutio­n at the hands of the Bashar Assad regime. However, in this context of exclusion and economic crisis, a section of the Syrian refugee community has resorted to criminalit­y. Indeed, according to Mawlawi, some 35 percent of the country’s prison population is made up of Syrians.

“Everyone in Lebanon avoided addressing the Syrian refugee crisis, but was content with reactions to every incident,” Hage Ali said.

“The Syrian asylum issue has turned into a taboo, so has the issue of illegal crossings. Populist talk is of no use. There is a marginaliz­ed group within the Syrian presence in Lebanon that will grow with time and will benefit, including organized crime.”

To make matters worse, Lebanon’s economic meltdown, which began in late 2019, and its continuing political deadlock have paralyzed the criminal justice system and institutio­nal structures designed to keep the fragile peace. Hage Ali believes Lebanon has “accumulate­d crimes during the last two decades without a minimum level of justice. Its amnesty system, to turn the page on the past, has turned into a system that perpetuate­s violence and injustice.

“Almost 50 years have passed since the outbreak of the civil war. Time was supposed to have taught the Lebanese that the approach to war should be different from the previous ones, but Lebanon is still within the ongoing cycle of violence.”

Once considered an oasis of calm in a region otherwise fraught with turmoil, Lebanon has again been brought to the brink of conflict. Many fear an incident such as the death of Suleiman could light the touchpaper of a new period of sectarian strife.

Melhem Khalaf, an independen­t member of parliament and former head of the Beirut Bar Associatio­n, told Arab News that Lebanese citizens will not stand by and allow their hard won peace and unity to be broken once again.

“We are just days away from the fateful anniversar­y of April 13 (the start of the Lebanese civil war), a memory that is full of fear and pain, and that is something we have worked so hard for years to avoid, to solidify peace and bring about reassuranc­e and stability,” Khalaf said.

“There is trouble that is once again rearing its head from the Byblos region, which throughout the senseless and ill-fated war maintained its national cohesion with a clear and solid will.

“It is a real warning that requires all of us to take action, to take the initiative and eliminate any strife that might take our society back to bygone and painful days. The dangers surroundin­g us from all sides are enough. We don’t want it, neither for our youth, nor for our people, nor for our country.” Khalaf believes what is happening now is “the decomposit­ion of the state and a sign of its continuing weakness.

“What we require today, with absolute speed, is to rally around each other to restore the state of truth and the rule of law. To have a state that guarantees coexistenc­e, as well as presidenti­al elections which will be the gateway to order.”

Although sectarian and intercommu­nal tensions are high, and public anger at the entrenched political elite continues to simmer, the elephant in the room today is the war in Gaza and the potential for a repeat of Lebanon’s devastatin­g 2006 war with Israel.

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack, which triggered Israel’s military assault on the Gaza Strip, the Palestinia­n militant group’s Hezbollah ally has traded fire with Israeli forces along the Lebanese border, raising fears of an expanding regional war.

As a result, Lebanese academic Fayad believes a return to the civil strife of decades past will likely be tempered by Hezbollah’s need to concentrat­e on the far greater existentia­l threat of war with Israel.

“There are different definition­s of strife in Lebanon,” Fayad said. “There is a vertical political division and sectarian polarizati­on, but so far it has not turned into an armed war because the strong party in it is Hezbollah, and it is not in its interest to frighten others.

“Rather it must convince them to stand by its side, especially in its war in southern Lebanon against Israel.”

Suleiman’s political affiliatio­ns also come into play, and the fact that the killers took him to an area controlled by Hezbollah on the LebaneseSy­rian border.

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Forces believes Hezbollah, bottom, may have had a hand in the death of Pascal Suleiman, inset and below with his family, fuelling sectarian anger, main.
Supplied/AFP Lebanese Forces believes Hezbollah, bottom, may have had a hand in the death of Pascal Suleiman, inset and below with his family, fuelling sectarian anger, main.

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