Emile Hokayem, Political Editor
Last Wednesday, the Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt met the Syrian president, Bashar Assad. It was the culmination of a year of repentance for his previously anti-Syrian stance following the 2005 assassination of his ally, the former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri.
Mr Jumblatt’s notorious political shifts would embarrass even the most vigorously swinging pendulum. In 2007, he called Mr Assad “the dictator of Damascus, a savage, an Israeli product, a liar and a criminal”. Last month, he apologised on air, saying such comments were “unworthy and unusual, unsuited to the ethics of politics even during a quarrel”. And on Thursday, he described his meeting with Mr Assad as “excellent, friendly, honest and very positive”.
He proceeded to announce that he would embrace Syria’s Lebanese allies and their agenda – from unconditional support of Hizbollah’s armed status to a denunciation of UN and Lebanese demands for a complete normalisation of relations between Lebanon and Syria.
While he had previously called for a truce with Israel to insulate fragile Lebanon from regional conflicts, he now pledges total adherence to pan-Arab causes. That includes armed resistance to recover the Israeli-occupied Shebaa Farms, a tiny piece of land that has become one of Hizbollah’s excuses for perpetual resistance.
Theatrics aside, there is no denying that the political manoeuvring of Mr Jumblatt, the leader of a tiny community with understandable existential fears, has always reflected the political balance inside Lebanon – a balance closely intertwined with Syria.
In 2008, it was Mr Jumblatt who provoked the violent Hizbollah takeover of Beirut and whose fighters confronted the its militiamen in the Druze mountain stronghold. From that episode and the lack of international reaction, he concluded that Hizbollah’s armed control of the streets and alliance with Syria and Iran outmatched its domestic foes.
Indeed, the anti-Syrian coalition won the 2009 elections, only to lose the political battle after France and Saudi Arabia, two of its foreign backers, rekindled ties with Damascus. This is why Mr Jumblatt asked the Hizbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, to intercede on his behalf with the Syrian president.
Mr Nasrallah, however, had more pressing concerns on the day of Mr Jumblatt’s Damascus visit. He was busy countering rumours that the UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon, set up to prosecute individuals for the murders of Mr Hariri and other anti-Syrian figures, was targeting his organisation.
In an interview, Mr Nasrallah acknowledged that several Hizbollah members had been questioned by UN investigators, but said they were witnesses, not suspects. He dismissed in harsh terms the rumours as an attempt to tarnish his movement’s image.
But, if Hizbollah were indeed implicated in Mr Hariri’s assassination, as several foreign press reports of varying reliability have asserted recently, it would profoundly shake Lebanese politics.
The how and why of alleged Hizbollah responsibility are debated ad nauseam in Beiruti salons, despite the secrecy of the Tribunal’s proceedings. Were the Syrians and Iranians involved or informed? Could the Hizbollah leadership have been blindsided by its own security apparatus? What could the motive be?
The problem for Hizbollah is that ever since an international investigation was put in place, it has fought to impede it, questioned its legitimacy and decried the loss of Lebanese sovereignty.
Twice it has blocked the government over issues relating to the Tribunal, which Lebanon partially funds and staffs. The assumption then was that Hizbollah was doing Syria’s bidding. Now, the reasoning goes, it looks like Hizbollah was simply protecting its own back.
At the same time, the investigation has been inconclusive after five years of work. The October 2005 finding that high-level Syrian intelligence figures were implicated was watered down. Four Lebanese generals who controlled the country’s security services at the time of Mr Hariri’s killing were released last year because no valid charges could be pressed against them.
The case against Hizbollah is, just as Mr Nasrallah pointed out, mostly in the media. And the court has suffered from the departure of several key officials, perhaps an indication of internal frustration and mismanagement.
In fact, the lacklustre performance of investigators has prompted speculation that their rapprochement with Syria has led western and Arab countries to tone down their support for the court. This is doubtful, although the early enthusiasm has significantly waned in Paris, Riyadh and Washington.
But if the reviled Hizbollah, rather than the now-courted Damascus, were the culprit, the rumour goes, perhaps this reluctance would evaporate. Some analysts already argue that Damascus is throwing Hizbollah under the bus or that the blame, if any, will be placed on the shoulders of Imad Mughniyeh, the Hizbollah security chief who was assassinated in Damascus two years ago.
The new concern in Beirut is that any indictment of a Hizbollah member, let alone an improbable extradition or sentencing, could lead to destabilisation, but that refraining from an indictment on those grounds would mean that blackmail triumphed over justice.
The conundrum of those Lebanese who fought Syria for political emancipation is that their most powerful tools, justice and foreign support, seem utterly inadequate when faced with regional and political realities.
It is probable that Mr Jumblatt’s turnaround has much to do with this messy state of affairs. Other Lebanese politicians, including the prime minister Saad Hariri, are in an even less comfortable position. It is only now that Lebanon realises the implications of discovering who was behind the Hariri assassination.
ehokayem@thenational.ae
The Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) is a local non-profit, non-partisan Lebanese human rights organization in Beirut that was established by the Franco-Lebanese Movement SOLIDA (Support for Lebanese Detained Arbitrarily) in 2006. SOLIDA has been active since 1996 in the struggle against arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and the impunity of those perpetrating gross human violations.
Search This Blog
Labels
Special Tribunal for Lebanon
Detention cases
Judiciary and Prison System
Enforced Disappearance
Women's rights
Kidnappings
ESC Rights
Environment
Non Palestinian refugees and Migrants
Public Freedoms
Palestinian Rights
Military Court
NGOs
Children rights
Torture
Minorities Rights
CLDH in the press
health
Human Rights Defenders
Death Penalty
Lebanese detained in Syria
disabled rights
Political rights
Displaced
LGBT
Racism
Right to life
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archives
-
▼
2010
(4682)
-
▼
April
(446)
- Elsharq - Women Council Baroud
- Almustaqbal - Assist In The Relative Access Of Wo...
- Alanwar - Women Council
- L'Orient le jour - Le temps de la barbarie - April...
- L'Orient le jour -Members of Hezbollah sentenced i...
- Daily Star - Angry Ketermaya mob lynch murder sus...
- Assafir - Letter from Georges Abdallah - April 30,...
- Almustaqbal - Baroud described the incident as dan...
- Aliwaa - Solidarity with detainee George Abdallah ...
- April 30,2010 - alanwar Lebanon solidarity with de...
- Alakhbar - Solidarity with detainee George Abdall...
- April 30,2010 - alakhbar Lebanon Angry Ketermaya m...
- April 30,2010 - naharnet Egypt Amnesty Internatio...
- April 30, 2010 - ILoubnan - Nasrallah calls for ar...
- April 30, 2010 - Now Lebanon - Nasrallah calls for...
- Almustaqbal - Conference On Solidarity For Child ...
- Naharnet - Egypt Hizbullah Cell Members Receive Va...
- L'Orient le jour - Prison Terms for members of the...
- L'Orient le jour - Hezbollah members convicted in ...
- Daily Star - Questions arise over arrests of Leban...
- Daily Star - Egyptian court sentences members of H...
- Almustaqbal - Reduce the penalties for the nine pr...
- Almustaqbal - Acquittal of a Jordanian and a Pales...
- Almustaqbal - Egypt Harsh sentences in the case of...
- Aliwaa - Egypt Sentenced to life imprisonment - Ap...
- Alhayat - Egypt Hizbullah Cell Members Receive Var...
- April 29,2010 - alanwar Lebanon Questions arise o...
- Now Lebanon - Suspect in Ketermaya murder arrested...
- April 29, 2010 - Naharnet - Lebanon Remains of Syr...
- April 29, 2010 - El Sharq - Palestine case of pri...
- April 29, 2010 - The Daily Star - Lebanon Remains ...
- April 29, 2010 - Al Balad - Lebanon Remains of Syr...
- April 29, 2010 - Al Akhbar - France case of Gilad ...
- April 29, 2010 - Naharnet - Lebanon Remains of Syr...
- L'Orient Le Jour - Le pari d’une association : vi...
- ILoubnan - ISF arrest 69 suspects - April 29, 2010
- L'Orient Le Jour - Femme acharnée et pétrie d’hum...
- Aliwaa - Nationality Campaign
- Albalad RUWAD case of deportation Refugees, April ...
- Albalad - Baroud inspects Zahle prison after reco...
- April 28,2010 - alanwar Lebanon Baroud inspects ...
- April 28,2010 - alakhbar Lebanon Baroud inspects...
- April 28,2010 - L'Orient le jour Lebanon Frontiers...
- Daily Star - Iraqi premier to work on releasing Le...
- April 28,2010 - Daily Star Lebanon Jdeideh polic...
- April 28,2010 - Daily Star Lebanon Baroud inspect...
- April 28,2010 - Assafir Iraqi refugees detained ar...
- April 28,2010 - assafir Lebanon Baroud inspecting ...
- April 28,2010 - assafir Lebanon Baroud inspecting ...
- April 28,2010 - assafir Lebanon 17 provision for t...
- April 28,2010 - Annahar RUWAD Refugees deportation
- Annahar - Baroud inspects Zahle prison after reco...
- April 28,2010 - Almustaqbal Frontiers Ruwad
- April 28,2010 - almustaqbal Lebanon Baroud Zahle P...
- April 28,2010 - aliwaa RUWAD case of deportation ...
- April 28,2010 - aliwaa Lebanon Baroud inspects Za...
- April 28,2010 - aliwaa Egypt Judgement Day in the ...
- April 28, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Israel shallit...
- April 28, 2010 - The Daily Star - Gaza Hamas downp...
- April 28, 2010 - Al Hayat - Somalia case of Britis...
- April 28, 2010 - Al Hayat - Palestine Israel case ...
- L'Orient Le Jour - Alpedys, pour aider les enfants...
- Assafir - For The Participation Of Persons With D...
- Assafir - Conference Takaful For Children
- April 28, 2010 - Iloubnan - ISF arrest 56 suspects
- April 28, 2010 - L'Orient le jour - Un an après sa...
- April 27, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Lebanon The pa...
- Aliwaa - Women Rights
- April 27, 2010 - Daily Star - Sleiman vows authori...
- L'Orient le jour - CLDH denounces torture in the p...
- April 27,2010 - Daily Star Sakr urges death penal...
- April 27,2010 - assafir Lebanon Issue of the 57 Le...
- April 27,2010 - Assafir - Families of detainees in...
- April 27,2010 - Annahar - Sami Gemayel about detai...
- April 27,2010 - almustaqbal Lebanon Solid relati...
- April 27,2010 - albalad Lebanon SOLIDE families ...
- Alakhbar - CLDH deportation of Iraqi Refugee - Apr...
- April 27,2010 - L'orient Lebanon The parents of Le...
- April 27, 2010 - L'Orient le jour - Siddiq défie l...
- April 27, 2010 - Naharnet - Siddiq Claims He's in ...
- April 27, 2010 - Albalad - Lebanon SOLIDE & famili...
- Alanwar - Children Rights
- April 26, 2010 - Naharnet - Suleiman: Tribunal Con...
- April 26,2010 - assafir Young people in a lecture...
- Assafir - Residents of 55 Lebanese detainees drive...
- April 26,2010 - aliwaa Lebanon Prison reform.doc
- April 26,2010 - Aliwaa - Launching the national ca...
- Alhayat - Egypt case of Hizbullah detainees
- April 26, 2010 - Now Lebanon - STL spokesperson sa...
- April 26, 2010 - Now Lebanon - Parents of missing ...
- April 2, 2010 - L'Orient le Jour - Israel Affaire ...
- April 26, 2010 - The Daily Star - GAZA Hamas broad...
- April 26, 2010 - Annahar - Lebanon Gemayel about d...
- April 26, 2010 - Annahar - Palestine Hamas case of...
- April 26, 2010 - Daily Star - STL releases first a...
- ILoubnan - ISF arrest 78 suspects
- Daily Star - Where Are The Women In Local Elections
- Daily Star - Foreign Husbands Residency Falls Short
- Assafir - Nationality Campaign A
- Assafir - Nationality Campaign
-
▼
April
(446)
No comments:
Post a Comment