Alawite leader in Lebanon charged for ‘terror ties’
A Lebanese flag flutters from a residential building with a bullet-riddled facade due to fighting between supporters and opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Lebanon’s northern port city of Tripoli March 21, 2014. (Reuters)
AFP, Beirut
Saturday, 5 April 2014
A senior member of an Alawite party in Lebanon’s restive northern city of Tripoli was charged Saturday with being part of an “armed terrorist group,” a judicial source said.Saturday, 5 April 2014
Rifaat Eid, the political leader of the Arab Democratic Party, was accused along with 11 others of “belonging to an armed terrorist group with the aim of carrying out terrorist acts,” the source told AFP.
They are also suspected of possessing weapons illegally, and “inciting sectarianism.”
The charges were filed after the army deployed in Tripoli in an unprecedented operation to quell violence between the Alawite neighborhood of Jabal Mohsen, where Eid’s party holds sway, and the nearby Sunni district of Bab el-Tebbaneh.
Tensions between the neighborhoods go back decades but have been exacerbated by the war in neighboring Syria, where the Alawite President Bashar al-Assad faces a Sunni-dominated uprising.
Successive rounds of violence between the neighborhoods have killed dozens of people and brought parts of the coastal city to a standstill.
The last round of fighting, which lasted two weeks and left 30 people dead, ended with the army’s deployment in the two neighborhoods on April 1.
Rifaat’s father, Ali Eid, is wanted for questioning over an August twin car bomb attack against two Sunni mosques in Tripoli that killed 45 people.
Lebanese media has reported that Rifaat Eid is in Syria, and Lebanese witnesses in Damascus told AFP on Saturday they had seen the Alawite leader the night before at a hotel in the Syrian capital.
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