Middle East

Lebanese politician’s stand-off with Hariri escalates into violence

A stand-off between Lebanon's Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri and a pro-Syrian politician escalated on Saturday when shots were fired while police sought to bring the politician in for questioning over accusations of stirring strife.

The past few days have seen a sharp rise in tension in Lebanon, after video emerged of Druze politician Wiam Wahhab filmed at a gathering making obscene personal insults, Reuters reported.

Although Wahhab did not identify the target of his insults in the video, he was widely perceived as referring to Prime Minister Saad Hariri and his father Rafik, a statesman who was killed in 2005.

Lebanon has suffered spasms of political crisis and violence since its 1975-90 civil war. Hariri leads a caretaker government but has been unable to form a cabinet since a May parliamentary election, with factions at odds over the division of posts.

Hariri's allies filed a legal complaint, accusing Wahhab, an ally of the powerful Shia group Hezbollah, of "stirring strife and risking civil peace" in the video.

The World Bank and Lebanons finance minister called for the formation of a new government. They said that a new government was needed soon, “to put an end over the financial and economic situation and to produce a climate of confidence regarding the future projects. pic.twitter.com/bfWz6rWrAL

— Khaliji Observer (@KhalijiObserver) December 2, 2018

Last month, the leader of Hezbollah, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, insisted that one of its four Sunni MP allies be given a portfolio in a new Lebanese cabinet, which is at the heart of a row that has obstructed the formation of a cabinet since the election. Hariri has rejected the demand.

All four Sunni MPs favoured by Hezbollah have close ties to the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad, MEE columnist Lina Khatib has written.

Hezbollah is proscribed as a terrorist group by the United States. The group fought a major conflict with Israel in 2006, and since then it has grown militarily stronger as a major participant in the Syrian war.

The police, in a statement, said officers had gone to Wahhab's residence in the village of al-Jahiliya on Saturday "with the aim of bringing him" in for questioning, but he had fled before their arrival.

It said police had not opened fire but unidentified gunmen had shot from neighbouring buildings, and Wahhab supporters had fired "randomly", wounding one of the politician's aides.

Wahhab was quoted by news organisation LBC International as saying one person was wounded in what he described as a clash.

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"I was subjected today to an attempted assassination and the person who was wounded was metres from me. Let Hariri bear the responsibility of this blood," he told LBC International in comments reported on its Twitter feed.

Wahhab, referring to the video that sparked the legal complaint, said his remarks were "general" and not directed at Hariri's family. He criticised the security forces for arriving in large numbers, adding: "What happened today means civil war".

The police said a travel ban had been imposed on him.

Earlier this week Hariri supporters staged protests and blocked roads after Wahhab denounced Hariri as incompetent in a TV interview. Hariri's Future Movement has said the Hariris were being targeted by "a campaign of falsehoods" hatched by "sick minds" bent on obstructing efforts to form a new government.

Wahhab, who has close ties to the Syrian government, is a prominent figure in Lebanon, although another politician, Walid Jumblatt, is the main leader in the Druze community that is guaranteed eight seats in Lebanon's 128-member parliament.

"We support any measure that firms up civil peace and it's enough that this person or anyone else threatens civil peace," Jumblatt said on Saturday after a meeting with Hariri.

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