Protests in Lebanon leave 7 dead

(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-01-28 09:51

On Sunday, Arab foreign ministers rejected Syria's demand that Hezbollah and its allies have greater representation in Lebanon's Cabinet, according to delegates at an emergency meeting in Cairo.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem had pushed for Hezbollah to have 10 ministers in the next Cabinet -- or one-third of the seats -- which would effectively give the Hezbollah-led opposition veto power.

Two delegates at the meeting confirmed the information, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. They spoke to The Associated Press by telephone while the meeting was still under way.

Sunday's violence was confined to mainly Shiite areas, and the army deployed in what appeared to be an attempt to prevent the unrest from spreading to nearby Sunni and Christian areas.

The fighting erupted near the former demarcation line between Christian and Muslim areas during the civil war, and near a district where the first spark of that 15-year sectarian conflict was ignited.

Demonstrators also blocked the main highway to the country's international airport, as well as roads along the Mediterranean coast, in the eastern Bekaa Valley and in southern Lebanon.

An official with the Shiite Amal group and another person were both killed in the Mar Mikhael intersection, and five others died of their wounds at hospitals in southern Beirut, security officials said on customary condition of anonymity. Ten people were wounded, they said.

Officials at two hospitals in the area confirmed they had received the bodies.

The Amal group, led by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, issued a statement urging its supporters to "be calm and not have any (violent) reaction in the streets."

It identified the member killed as Ahmed Hamza, and said the military had pledged to investigate the incident.

The Lebanese army also issued a statement calling on people to "cooperate with the forces that work for their security and stability."

After nightfall, loudspeakers affixed to vehicles carrying Hezbollah activists called on rioters to disperse and go home, but dozens remained and continued to burn tires.

Later Sunday, a hand grenade was thrown in the Christian suburb of Ein Roummaneh, wounding four people, the security officials said.

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