Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lebanon clashes present test

Battles rage near mosque; 16 soldiers dead

- By ZEINA KARAM and BARBARA SURK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIRUT — Lebanon’s third-largest city of Sidon was turned into a battle zone Monday as the military fought armed followers of an extremist Sunni Muslim cleric holed up in a mosque.

Residents of the southern port fled machine-gun fire and grenade explosions that shook the coastal area in one of the deadliest rounds of violence, seen as a test of the weak government’s ability to contain the furies unleashed by the civil war in neighborin­g Syria.

Official reports said at least 16 soldiers were killed and 50 wounded in two days of clashes with armed followers of Ahmad al-Assir, a maverick Sunni sheik whose rapid rise is a sign of the frustratio­n among many Lebanese who resent the ascendancy of Shiites to power, led by the militant group Hezbollah. More than 20 of al-Assir’s supporters were killed, according to a security official.

The battle that al-Assir’s fighters were putting up showed how aggressive Sunni extremists have grown in Lebanon, building on anger not only at Syria’s re- gime but also its allies in Hezbollah.

“Sidon is a war zone,” said Nabil Azzam, a resident who returned briefly Monday to check on his home after having fled with his family a day earlier. “This is the result of all the sectarian rhetoric that has been building because of the war in Syria. It was bound to happen,” he said by telephone.

Machine-gun fire and explosions from rocket-propelled grenade caused panic among residents, who reported power and water outages. Snipers allied with al-Assir took over rooftops, terrorizin­g civilians, and many were asking to be evacuated from the populated neighborho­od around the Bilal bin Rabbah Mosque, where al-Assir preaches and where the fighting has been concentrat­ed.

The military appealed to the gunmen to turn themselves in, vowing to continue its operations “until security is totally restored.” By evening, the army had stormed the mosque complex but not the mosque itself.

In addition to the more than 20 followers of the cleric who were killed, dozens of them were arrested, the security of- ficial said. There was no sign of al-Assir, and it was unclear whether he was in the mosque or had managed to escape.

The fighting in Sidon is the bloodiest involving the army since the military fought a three-month battle in 2007 against the al-Qaida-inspired Fatah Islam group inside the Palestinia­n refugee camp of Nahr el-Bared in northern Lebanon. The Lebanese army crushed the group, but the clashes killed more than 170 soldiers.

The scenes of soldiers aiming at gunmen holed up in residentia­l buildings and armored personnel vehicles deployed in the streets evoked memories of Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war.

The challenges facing the Lebanese military resemble those that prevailed in that conflict, which eventually splintered the army along sectarian lines.

“It’s the memory of this destructiv­e war that remains as a restrainin­g force — for now,” said Fawaz A. Gerges, director of the Middle East Center at the London School of Economics.

Syria’s civil war has been bleeding into Lebanon for the past year after similar sectarian lines of Sunni and Shiite camps. Overstretc­hed and outgunned by militias, the military has struggled on multiple fronts in the eastern Bekaa valley and the northern city of Tripoli.

 ?? MOHAMMED ZAATARI/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Soldiers help comrades after clashes Monday between followers of a Sunni cleric and Shiite gunmen in Sidon, Lebanon.
MOHAMMED ZAATARI/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Soldiers help comrades after clashes Monday between followers of a Sunni cleric and Shiite gunmen in Sidon, Lebanon.

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