Hezbollah Beirut takeover deepens sectarian wounds
By Tom Perry
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Hezbollah's takeover of Beirut lasted only two days but it could take years to repair the damage the show of force has done to relations between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims in the capital.
"Things will never be the same again," said Ahmed, describing how gunmen held a rifle to his brother's head during the takeover by Hezbollah and Amal -- Shi'ite factions whose fighters swept through the capital on Thursday and Friday.
Their main targets were offices of the Future group -- the political faction of governing coalition leader Saad al-Hariri, who draws most of his support from the Sunni community.
Ahmed, a Sunni, had been visiting a friend when gunmen stormed the building and destroyed his car, parked below. His brother had been at home when the gunmen threatened him.
"I've never supported any politician. I always cursed them all," said Ahmed, who lives in one of many Beirut districts where residents fear that years of Sunni-Shi'ite coexistence has been undermined.
Some of the gunmen were from the same area, he said, showing pictures he had taken on a mobile phone of his car, its windows smashed, and other vandalised vehicles. Like other Lebanese interviewed since the violence began, he did not want to be identified for fear the gunmen might return.
Acts of revenge were a certainty. "Not by me, but I know a lot of guys who will seek revenge," he said, describing how the gunmen had shouted sectarian abuse during their attack.
The prospect of Sunni-Shi'ite strife was one reason Hezbollah had been hesitant to turn its powerful arsenal against Lebanese political foes who it has accused of conspiring with the United States and Israel. Continued...




