Friday, December 27, 2013

Beirut blast kills Sunni politician

Beirut blast kills Sunni ex-minister Mohamad Chatah

Carine Torbey: "Explosion was so loud it resonated in different parts of the city"

Former Lebanese minister and opposition figure Mohamad Chatah has been killed by a car bomb in central Beirut.

Four others were killed and at least 50 people were hurt in the attack.

Mr Chatah, a Sunni Muslim, was an adviser to ex-PM Saad Hariri. He was also a staunch critic of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Lebanon's Shia Hezbollah movement that backs him.

There has been a wave of attacks in Lebanon, linked to heightened Sunni-Shia tensions over the Syrian war.

Saad Hariri implicitly accused Hezbollah of carrying out the attack.

He blamed "those who are hiding from international justice and who have spread the regional fire to the [Lebanese] nation".

Five Hezbollah suspects are due to go on trial in three week' time, charged in connection with assassinating Saad Hariri's father and former Prime Minister, Rafik, in a huge car bombing in February 2005.

Hezbollah has denied involvement in Rafik Hariri's death.

Wrecked cars, Beirut 27 Dec 13 The powerful blast sent black smoke billowing over central Beirut
Wrecked car, Beirut 27 Dec 13 Several cars were wrecked and debris was hurled over a wide area
Woman wounded in blast, 27 Dec 13 Witnesses say the streets were busy and at least 50 people were injured

No-one has claimed responsibility for Friday's attack.

'Terror and panic'

Mr Chatah was on his way to a meeting of the anti-Syrian March 14 bloc, led by Saad Hariri, when his convoy was hit.

The bomb went off at 09:00 (07:00 GMT) between the Starco Centre and Phoenicia Hotel, not far from the Lebanese parliament building.

The blast damaged several buildings and set several cars ablaze.

Witnesses described shock and fear at the scene of the blast.

"We were opening our store when we heard the blast. It was really loud. We are used to blasts in Lebanon but not in this area. Now we are not safe anywhere," said Mohammad, a shop assistant quoted by AFP news agency.

Adel-Raouf Kneio, who saw the blast, told Reuters news agency the explosion "caught motorists driving in the morning rush hour" and "there was terror and panic among residents".

"There was a big ball of fire and panic everywhere and then we learned that Chatah was the target," he said.

Forensic experts are at the scene, which has been sealed off by security forces.

'Sending a message'

The BBC's Carine Torbey in Beirut says Chatah was not a controversial figure in Lebanon. He is known as a moderate and so there is a lot of speculation that the bombing was a message was sent to the March 14 bloc itself, rather than Chatah as an individual, our correspondent says.

In a Twitter message early on Friday, shortly before he was killed, Mr Chatah said Hezbollah was "pressing hard to be granted similar powers in security and foreign policy matters that Syria exercised in Lebanon for 15 years".

Syria withdrew its forces from Lebanon amid a backlash over the killing of Rafik Hariri, in which many suspected it had a role.

Hezbollah has sent fighters to help President Assad in the war against Sunni-led rebels in Syria. President Assad comes from the Alawite sect, a heterodox offshoot of Shia Islam.

Iran, which backs Hezbollah, saw its embassy in Beirut attacked last month. A Sunni jihadist group Abdullah Azzam Brigades said it had carried out that attack.

Earlier this month, a senior Hezbollah commander with close links to Iran, Hassan Lakkis, was shot dead outside his home near Beirut. A little known Sunni militant group claimed responsibility.

Beirut map - scene of bombing

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