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The warring parties in Lebanon agreed to a deal brokered by Arab diplomats, and incoming flights to Beirut's International airport have resumed ending a week of bloody, political crisis. More than 60 people were killed since violence in Lebanon broke out on May 7, after the government discovered... [read full story]
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Hezbollah has proven it can force Lebanon's U.S.-backed government to cave in on key issues. But the Shiite militant group's power is not absolute - the government is still in place and Hezbollah has lost support among the people by turning its guns on them.
BEIRUT, Lebanon – The U.S.-backed Cabinet reversed measures yesterday against the militant Hezbollah movement that set off Lebanon's worst violence since the 1975-90 civil war. The decision was a major victory for the Iranian-allied Hezbollah and the latest sign that the Shiite militant group...
A Hezbollah supporter removes a metal fence blocking the highway leading to the international airport of Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, May 15, 2008. The road was blocked by Hezbollah and other Shiite militiamen for nine days, but opened Thursday after talks between Lebanese political leaders and...
Hezbollah has proven it can force Lebanon's U.S.-backed government to cave in on key issues. But the Shiite militant group's power is not absolute - the government is still in place and Hezbollah has lost support among the people by turning its guns on them. A Lebanese couple walks between razor...
Hezbollah has proven it can force Lebanon's U.S.-backed government to cave in on key issues. But the Shiite militant group's power is not absolute — the government is still in place and Hezbollah has lost support among the people by turning its guns on them.
Hezbollah roadblocks being cleared in Beirut Lebanese factions meeting Friday in Qatar Power struggle has kept Lebanon without a president since November Latest violence began May 2 as labor dispute but escalated; 62 killed BEIRUT, Lebanon (CNN) -- Hezbollah militants Thursday began removing...
Hezbollah has proven it can force Lebanon's U.S.-backed government to cave in on key issues. But the Shiite militant group's power is not absolute — the government is still in place and Hezbollah has lost support among the people by turning its guns on them.
Published: Thursday, 15 May, 2008 @ 10:28 PM in Beirut (GMT+2) By Khaled Yacoub Oweis Beirut - At an upmarket jeweller's in east Beirut's Ashrafieh district, wealthy Lebanese Christians shop for gold and diamonds, far removed from the upheaval that has sidelined their once-dominant community....
Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) BEIRUT, Lebanon _ An extensive telephone network constructed by the Shiite Hezbollah movement, possibly with Iranian help, lies at the heart of the crisis that pushed Lebanon to the brink of civil war this week. The state-of-the-art fiber-optic network was laid mostly...
The warring political camps in Lebanon agreed Thursday to hold renewed talks in a deal negotiated by Arab diplomats that reopened the country's airport and appeared to end a week of bloody political crisis. The government, supported by the West and Saudi Arabia, had already backed down from two...
Saud al-Faisal, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Hassan Nasrallah, Rafik Hariri, King Abdullah II, George W. Bush, Terrorist Organizations & Leaders, Defense & Security Forces, Current Conflicts, War, Terrorism & Civil Disorder, Terrorism, Middle East Terrorist Groups, Terrorist Members & Leaders, Defense, Arab-Israeli Conflict, Hezbollah, Lebanon, Iran, Saudi Arabia

