Throngs mourn slain Lebanese official

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-24 09:07

Business and industry leaders announced they would go on a two-day strike beginning Friday to pressure politicians from both sides to sit down and talk to settle the political crisis.

But the bitterness dividing the country was on vivid display.

Inside St. Georges Cathedral, some in the congregation booed when Shiite Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, a Hezbollah ally, entered. Amin Gemayel pointedly skipped Berri as he greeted other dignitaries participating in the ceremony.

Out in Martyrs' Square, protesters stomped on pictures of Assad and Lahoud ¡ª and of Hezbollah's Christian ally, Michel Aoun. They sang songs mocking Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah.

"We are here because we don't want to give this land to Syria or Iran," said Bouchra Salameh, a 59-year-old nurse outside the cathedral. "They're tearing my country apart. It's burning, it's on fire."

The anger and grief was in contrast to mass anti-Syrian protests that were held in Martyrs' Square last year, sparked by the February 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

Those protests, which were on the same scale as Thursday's turnout, were often festive and hopeful. The mass rallies, bolstered by strong international pressure, forced the April 2005 withdrawal of Syrian troops, ending 29 years of Syrian domination.

Clearly buoyed by the large turnout at the funeral, Prime Minister Fuad Saniora went on national television Thursday night appealing to Hezbollah and its allies to resume a national dialogue broken off earlier in the month.

"Dialogue is the only and sure path that guarantees results," he said.

But his government was pressing ahead with one of the issues that prompted the crisis ¡ª the creation of a U.N.-backed international court to try suspects in the Hariri slaying, which Hezbollah opposes. A government official said Saniora called a Cabinet meeting for Saturday to approve the court.

The next stage in the confrontation will likely see efforts to oust the president. During the rally, Lahoud was at the Baabda presidential palace, where heavy security was in place to guard against protesters marching there in an attempt to force him to resign.

Lahoud, whose term ends in a year, has refused to step down. The anti-Syrian majority in Parliament is unable to muster enough votes to force him out without the help of the Christian politician Aoun.

Pierre Gemayel, the scion of his powerful Maronite Christian family, was killed Tuesday when two cars blocked his vehicle at an intersection as he left a church in a Beirut suburb and assassins shot him numerous times through a side window. His driver also was killed.

He was the sixth anti-Syrian figure killed in Lebanon in two years. Syria has denied any role in the slayings of Hariri, Gemayel and the other.

During the ceremony at St. Georges Cathedral, Gemayel's widow wept on the shoulder of her mother-in-law as the head of the Maronite Church, Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, delivered a sermon urging Lebanese to unite to save their country.

"We should firmly take a stand and get together in understanding and love," Sfeir said.

After the service, the coffin was taken to the family's hometown, Bikfaya, and Gemayel was buried.


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