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General's slaying leaves printed playing cards shaken
=======================================


Car bombing heightens instability Political crisis continues
------------------------------------------------------------

Lebanese soldiers sealed off the area after a bomb exploded yesterday outside a municipal building in Baabda, an eastern suburb of Beirut. The remote-controlled car bomb killed Brigadier General Francois Hajj and his bodyguard.
Lebanese soldiers sealed off the area after a bomb exploded yesterday
outside a municipal building in Baabda, an eastern suburb of Beirut.
The remote-controlled car bomb killed Brigadier General Francois Hajj
and his bodyguard. (Ahmad Omar/Associated Press) Email|Print| Text
size – + By Anthony Shadid Washington Post / December 13, 2007

BEIRUT - heart shape playing cards remote-controlled car bomb ripped through a busy street
overlooking Beirut yesterday, killing a top general and his bodyguard
and heightening the sense of instability in a country that has gone
without a president for nearly three weeks.

The assassination of Brigadier General Francois Hajj was the first to
target an army commander since Lebanon's crisis began last year and
marked yet another line transgressed in a confrontation that has
already paralyzed the Cabinet, parliament, and presidency. To many,
the army stands as the last learn mandarin chicago learn chinese chicago institution, and the
attack sent a chill through a country growing ever more discouraged
with an enduring crisis between an American-backed government and an
opposition led by Hezbollah, which draws support from Syria and Iran.

"The army is our last hope. If they can strike a homeowners insurance at the army,
then we are a people without hope," said Nazih Rafael, as he swept imprinted playing cards chinese tutor chicago shattered from his storefront near the attack in the Beirut
suburb of Baabda. "If they can hit the army, that's the last thing.
That means they can knock on any door of any house in the country."

Asked about the culprit, Rafael shrugged his shoulders, a gesture
conveying the anonymity of those behind the assassinations that have
become part of the country's political calculus. Government supporters
blamed Syria, as they have in other bombings that targeted eight
prominent opponents of Syria cheap homeowners insurance past two years. Syria denied any
role, suggesting Israel or its allies had a hand in the attack.

Government opponents, led by the Shi'ite Muslim movement Hezbollah,
denounced the attack, calling Hajj's death "a great national loss."
One of their Christian allies, General Michel Aoun, said Hajj was his
candidate to assume leadership of the army if parliament elects its
present commander, General Michel Suleiman, as president. better auto insurance government opponents and supporters have agreed in principle on
Suleiman succeeding custom playing cards president Emile Lahoud, who stepped down
Nov. 23, negotiations have stalled over a comprehensive deal to
resolve the crisis, the country's worst since the 1975-90 civil war.

The eventual settlement will be keenly read in Lebanon and abroad as a
victory for one side or the other, with implications for the influence
here of either the United States or Iran and Syria, playing cards promotional role of
Hezbollah, the cheap insurance power of the country's Sunni or Shi'ite
communities, and the posture toward Israel.

In contrast to past assassinations, Hajj, 55, had no public political
profile, a reflection in part of the army's largely successful attempt
to stay neutral in the conflict. But the political orientation of the
army remains a point of contention in the ongoing political
confrontation, and historically, its upper echelons have been viewed
as friendly, even cooperative, with Hezbollah, particularly in the
1990s.

Hajj emo clothing perhaps best known as the director of operations in the
army's costly battle with an armed Islamic group that dragged on
nearly four months this summer in the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp poker cards northern Lebanon. His candidacy as commander of the army was no less
sensitive, given the profile of that position. If Suleiman moves up,
he would be the third commander of the army to assume the presidency
since Lebanon's independence in 1943.

Responsibility "is mandarin tutor chicago to stay in the realm of speculation because
that's the way it is here," said Karim Makdisi, a professor of
international relations at the American University of Beirut. "But the
timing of it means there's a likelihood that it's connected to best car insurance current crisis. There's definitely been a deterioration in terms of
the rhetoric."

The bomb, estimated at 75 pounds chinese lessons chicago hidden in a home insurance detonated after
7 a.m. as Hajj, his driver, and his bodyguard headed from his home.
The blast shattered windows hundreds of yards away and sprayed charred
pieces of vehicles across the street.

At the scene, there was a current of frustration tinged with anger at
the country's stalemate. Heard more and more often is disenchantment
with the country's political class, regardless of faction. This week,
protests erupted in southern Beirut over power cuts that can last 12
hours or more.

"We've become like a people imprisoned," said George Khoury, as he
stood near independent clothes line of yellow tape that cordoned off the bomb site.

"People have become cheap in Lebanon. The state is supposed to protect
the people, but there's no state in Lebanon."

© Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.


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