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Stabroek News

Mubarak fears 'battlefield' if Lebanon protests continue
published: Sunday | December 3, 2006


REUTERS
Lebanese army blocks Hezbollah protesters near the government headquarters in central Beirut on the second day of protests by the opposition demanding the resignation of the U.S.-backed government yesterday.

CAIRO (Reuters):

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said yesterday he feared continued street demonstrations, especially if they became sectarian, could turn Lebanon into a battlefield.

On Friday, hundreds of thousands of Hezbollah-led protesters rallied in Beirut to try to force the resignation of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora's United States-backed government. The protest continued on Saturday.

"Wisdom is required in dealing with internal differences," Mubarak told journalists in Sharm el-Sheikh, where he was meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. "What I fear is that if the demonstrations continue, and take on a sectarian form, supporters of these sects from outside Lebanon will join in and no one will be able to control it, especially if it continues for a long time."

Mubarak, an ally of Washington in the Middle East, said he was worried outside forces could exacerbate the situation.

"And the result will be a transformation of Lebanon into a battlefield that subjects it to danger," he said.

Hezbollah, Lebanon's most powerful Shi'ite Muslim group, and its pro-Syrian allies had called on Lebanese from across the country to take part in the protest in the capital Beirut, to be followed by an indefinite sit-in.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, has branded the government a U.S. puppet. Hezbollah has been at loggerheads with Siniora's government over what it says was its failure to back the group during the July-August war with Israel.

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