Eclipsed from the headlines by the ongoing carnage, there is an active
civil resistance in Iraq that opposes the occupation, the torture regime
it protects, and the jihadi and Ba'athist 'resistance' alike.
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Thu, 06/09/2005 - 03:21.
This from Reporters Without Borders on the June 2 car-bomb slaying of leading newspaper columnist Samir Kassir in Beirut:
Kassir was killed when his white Alfa Romeo car, which was parked outside his home in the Christian neighbourhood of Achrafieh in East Beirut, exploded at 10:45 a.m. (07:45 GMT). Interior minister Hassan Sabeh told journalists on 3 June that Kassir was killed "by the explosion of a charge of 500 to 700 grams of plastic explosive attached to the chassis of his car beneath the driver's seat, which was set off by remote control." A woman whose identity was not released was injured by the blast.
Lebanese army soldiers rushed to the scene of the bombing. Prime Minister Nagib Miqati, French ambassador Bernard Emié, German ambassador Rudolf Kniess and European Commission representative Patrick Renault all went to the scene as well.
A writer and historian with both French and Lebanese citizenship, 45-year-old Kassir had been writing columns for the past 10 years for An-Nahar ("The Day" in Arabic), a moderate daily newspaper with a circulation of 55,000. He was also the correspondent of the French-language international television station TV5 and had written for many years for the French monthly Le Monde Diplomatique. He was also professor of political sciences at Beirut's St Joseph university.
Well-known for his anti-Syrian positions and his criticism of the "Lebanese police state," he had been harassed and threatened for years. In 2000, he was harassed by Lebanese state security police and his Lebanese passport was confiscated. He later said he was constantly followed by Lebanese and Syrian intelligence agents. Former prime minister Hariri had given him protection at that time. His last column, on 27 May, was headlined "Gaffe after gaffe" and criticised "the continuing repression in Syria."
Kassir was one of the founders of the opposition Movement of the Democratic Left and was an active participant in the anti-Syrian protests in the spring of this year. After meeting on the evening of 2 June, the Lebanese opposition called for the resignation of President Emile Lahoud and urged all Lebanese to observe a day of mourning and a strike on 3 June, which ended up receiving little support.
The Lebanese press was glowing in its tributes to Kassir, calling him a "martyr to freedom and democracy." In response to an appeal from the daily An-Nahar, hundreds of journalists dressed in black and white observed an hour of silence from 7 to 8 a.m. on 3 June in the centre of Beirut, raising their fists in the air at the end.
President Lahoud said he "condemned the murder" and announced that he would ask the head of the UN commission investigating Hariri's 14 February assassination to extend their enquiries to include Kassir's murder. Lahoud also said he would chair an extraordinary cabinet meeting to "consider and adopt measures needed to protect journalists and the media against all attacks."
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Details on Samir Kassir slaying
This from Reporters Without Borders on the June 2 car-bomb slaying of leading newspaper columnist Samir Kassir in Beirut: