Syrian intelligence agents complete Beirut pullout (Agencies) Updated: 2005-03-16 09:23
Syrian intelligence agents moved out of their Beirut headquarters early on
Wednesday, witnesses said, a step toward meeting U.S. and Lebanese opposition
demands for an end to Syria's tutelage over its small neighbor.
The witnesses said a bulldozer demolished two guard posts, trucks loaded with
office equipment drove away and the last intelligence officers left the
headquarters in the seafront Ramlet al-Baida district.
 A
Lebanese protester raises the country's flag near the Syrian intelligence
offices in Beirut, March 15, 2005. Syrian intelligence agents began
evacuating their headquarters in Beirut on Tuesday, partially meeting a
key U.S. and Lebanese opposition demand for an end to three decades of
Syrian tutelage over its neighbor.[Reuters]
| The Syrians had also removed pictures of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad and his late father Hafez from around the building
before driving away.
Syria's often feared intelligence apparatus has been a key element in its
political and military influence on Lebanon since its troops first intervened
early in the 1975-90 civil war.
A Lebanese security source said he expected all Syrian intelligence agents in
Beirut, the north and the Mount Lebanon area overlooking the capital, to have
moved to eastern Lebanon by Wednesday night. He put their number at 150 to 200.
 Workers load the furniture of the Syrian intelligence office
onto a truck, in Beirut March 15, 2005.[Reuters]
| For now Syrian intelligence retains its Lebanon headquarters in the Bekaa
Valley town of Anjar, but the closure of the Beirut office indicated that Syrian
forces have almost completed the first phase of a withdrawal from Lebanon
announced 10 days ago.
Syria agreed to move its troops after the Feb. 14 killing of former Prime
Minister Rafik al-Hariri sparked fierce anti-Syrian protests in Beirut and
global calls for the Syrians to leave.
US President Bush called on the Shi'ite Muslim Hizbollah guerrilla group to
prove it was not a terrorist organization by laying down its arms and working
for peace.
"We view Hizbollah as a terrorist organization and I would hope that
Hizbollah would prove that they're not by laying down arms and not threatening
peace," Bush told reporters on Tuesday with Jordan's King Abdullah at his side.
Hizbollah brought out hundreds of thousands of people on the streets of
Beirut last week in support of Syria, showing it has massive support in Lebanon.
It also has members in parliament and runs charities.
PROTEST
Around 3,000 pro-Syrian students chanting "Death to America" marched on the
U.S. embassy near Beirut on Tuesday, burning Israeli and American flags and
denouncing what they say is Washington's interference in Lebanon.
The crowd chanted: "Ambassador leave, keep our country free," in reference to
U.S. envoy Jeffrey Feltman.
Scores of Lebanese soldiers and riot police, backed by armored troop
carriers, put up metal barricades and barbed wire to keep the protesters away
from the embassy complex in Awkar, north of Beirut, but the protest went off
peacefully.
Lebanese security sources say the Syrians will complete the first stage of
their pullout in the next couple of days. More than 4,000 soldiers returned to
Syria last week, while 2,000 more were redeploying eastwards to the Bekaa
Valley.
The dismantling of the intelligence headquarters and another Syrian
intelligence office in Beirut coincided with a visit to Damascus by Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak and efforts by Lebanon's pro-Syrian Prime
Minister-designate Omar Karami to form a unity government to defuse the
political crisis.
Mubarak met Assad, who is under intense Lebanese, Arab and world pressure for
a full withdrawal. Syrian media said they discussed Lebanon but gave no details.
Mubarak later flew home.
Karami, forced to resign on Feb. 28 but reappointed last week, met
politicians and parliamentary blocs on Tuesday on the make-up of a new cabinet
to lead Lebanon to elections in May.
Opposition MPs gave him a list of demands, including an international
investigation into Hariri's killing and the sacking of Syrian-backed security
chiefs, saying these must be met before they would discuss joining any
government.
If Karami fails, it could delay the parliamentary polls because a new
government must be in place to ask the assembly to pass an electoral law at
least a month before the election.
A U.N. fact-finding team finished its probe into the killing of Hariri on
Tuesday and will report its findings to Secretary-General Kofi Annan soon.
Hundreds of thousands of flag-waving anti-Syrian protesters flooded central
Beirut on Monday in Lebanon's biggest rally since Hariri's assassination in a
bomb blast a month earlier.
Several opposition leaders, including Druze chief Walid Jumblatt, called for
the resignation of Lahoud and Lebanese security chiefs, whom they accuse of
playing a part in Hariri's death. Damascus denies any
involvement.
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