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Why Lebanon violence might not spiral, despite funeral protests (+video)

Violence broke out in Lebanon following the funeral of Gen. Wissam al-Hassan. Whether his assassination will directly spur prolonged and deepening unrest in Lebanon is doubtful, however.

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A sea of flags representing political parties, banners, and pictures of Hassan were held aloft by the crowd in Martyrs’ Square. One banner read “Remove Bashar from Lebanon.” Another banner showed pictures of Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah and Prime Minister Najib Mikati with the inscription, “The blood of Wissam is on your necks.”

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Support for Syrian rebels

Among the mourners was a group of Syrian activists brandishing the old Syrian flag adopted by the revolutionaries and chanting “God, Syria, and freedom.”

“I’m here today because of the support that the Lebanese have given our revolution,” said Burhan Agha, an activist originally from Homs, Syria’s third largest city. “Syria is behind this operation. Assad wants to start a war between the Lebanese.”

He recalled how the mass anti-Syria demonstrations in 2005 had forced the Syrian Army to depart Lebanon.

“Hopefully, the death of Wissam al-Hassan will force Assad to leave Damascus,” he said, before being hoisted onto the shoulders of his comrades to lead more chants.

Survivors among gathered

Gradually, politicians allied to the March 14 coalition assembled on the steps of the mosque to await the arrival of the funeral convoy. Among them was Marwan Hamade, a former minister who survived a bomb assassination attempt in 2004, the first of a series of killings between 2004 and 2008 that left 12 politicians, journalists, and security officials dead. Beside Mr. Hamade stood Amine Gemayel, a former president whose son Pierre was assassinated in November 2006.

Two coffins draped with the Lebanese flag carrying the remains of Hassan and Mr. Sahyouni were carried into the mosque by ISF officers for funeral prayers. The two men were to be buried in Martyrs’ Square beside the grave of Mr. Hariri.

Under Hassan’s leadership, the ISF’s intelligence bureau broke up several Israeli spy rings operating in Lebanon and spearheaded the Lebanese investigation into the Hariri assassination. The ISF’s probe resulted in the issuing of indictments last year against four members of Hezbollah for their alleged role in Hariri’s death.

In August, the ISF arrested Michel Samaha, a former Lebanese minister and close ally of Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, on charges of plotting a series of bombings around the country at the behest of the Syrian regime. Mr. Samaha confessed to the charges when shown a secretly filmed video in which he discussed the plot with his confederates. His arrest was an unusually bold step by the ISF and reportedly caused outrage in Damascus.

Following the funeral, a few hundred protesters converged on the Grand Serail, the Ottoman-era building that houses the Lebanese government, and clashed with security forces. The police and troops fired shots in the air and lobbed tear gas at the protesters who responded by throwing sticks and tearing down steel barriers.

Although the clashes ended quickly after public appeals for calm from politicians, protesters began blocking roads with burning tires in parts of Beirut and on the coastal highway leading south from the capital.

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