Shadows of civil war?Four Gulf Arab nations - Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates - have told their citizens to stay away from Lebanon, citing security concerns, and Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah said the "shadow of civil war" hangs over Lebanon.The crisis is likely to hurt the summer tourism season, an important source of foreign revenue, and has helped push Beirut's stock market index down to 1,154 points on Wednesday, 30 percent down from levels in April 2010 before domestic and regional unrest hit investor confidence.Amid the growing fears of instability, Hezbollah - whose supporters seized control of west Beirut four years ago in the last bout of major violence in the capital - has sought to calm the fevered atmosphere.Its leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah called for restraint on Tuesday after the kidnapping of 13 Lebanese Shi'ites in Syria, and avoided getting sucked into the fighting in Beirut on Monday which security sources said pitched supporters of Hariri's Future Movement against a Sunni group sympathetic to Hezbollah."Hezbollah is going to sit on its hands. It is not going to do anything. Hezbollah's modus operandi has always been not to get dragged into sectarian strife," said Amal Saad Ghorayeb, author of a book on the Shi'ite movement."So long as these groups don't pose a threat to Hezbollah's resistance (to Israel) in any way, there is no way Hezbollah will get dragged in just because of killings."But it might still seek to use its influence with pro-Syrian groups in the north if it felt support for the Syrian opposition becomes "more aggressive", Attrache said.A political source in Lebanon's March 8 coalition, which includes Hezbollah, said the Shi'ite group would not resort to arms even if tensions in the north endured for decades. But he made clear Hezbollah was monitoring the region closely."There are serious efforts to turn the north into an operations room for Syrian rebels," he said. "This will only happen in the absence of the army and state authority."Analyst Kamel said clashes were likely to continue in Tripoli between Sunni Muslim and Alawite gunmen, as well as fighting between Sunni Islamist groups and the army, although tensions in the capital itself might be contained."This is not a chapter heading to civil war, but rather one where conflicts or violence are geographically localized, particularly in the north," he said.
Syria violence shakes Lebanon's fragile stability
"Given the history and ethnic and religious make-up of the population, and the principles on which the Lebanese state is based, it could end very badly," Russia's Lavrov warns.
Shadows of civil war?Four Gulf Arab nations - Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates - have told their citizens to stay away from Lebanon, citing security concerns, and Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah said the "shadow of civil war" hangs over Lebanon.The crisis is likely to hurt the summer tourism season, an important source of foreign revenue, and has helped push Beirut's stock market index down to 1,154 points on Wednesday, 30 percent down from levels in April 2010 before domestic and regional unrest hit investor confidence.Amid the growing fears of instability, Hezbollah - whose supporters seized control of west Beirut four years ago in the last bout of major violence in the capital - has sought to calm the fevered atmosphere.Its leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah called for restraint on Tuesday after the kidnapping of 13 Lebanese Shi'ites in Syria, and avoided getting sucked into the fighting in Beirut on Monday which security sources said pitched supporters of Hariri's Future Movement against a Sunni group sympathetic to Hezbollah."Hezbollah is going to sit on its hands. It is not going to do anything. Hezbollah's modus operandi has always been not to get dragged into sectarian strife," said Amal Saad Ghorayeb, author of a book on the Shi'ite movement."So long as these groups don't pose a threat to Hezbollah's resistance (to Israel) in any way, there is no way Hezbollah will get dragged in just because of killings."But it might still seek to use its influence with pro-Syrian groups in the north if it felt support for the Syrian opposition becomes "more aggressive", Attrache said.A political source in Lebanon's March 8 coalition, which includes Hezbollah, said the Shi'ite group would not resort to arms even if tensions in the north endured for decades. But he made clear Hezbollah was monitoring the region closely."There are serious efforts to turn the north into an operations room for Syrian rebels," he said. "This will only happen in the absence of the army and state authority."Analyst Kamel said clashes were likely to continue in Tripoli between Sunni Muslim and Alawite gunmen, as well as fighting between Sunni Islamist groups and the army, although tensions in the capital itself might be contained."This is not a chapter heading to civil war, but rather one where conflicts or violence are geographically localized, particularly in the north," he said.