FYI.

This story is over 5 years old.

News

"Tripoli Is Crying": Lebanon's Second City Is On the Brink of Battle

After a brief truce, Tripoli's two warring neighbourhoods might start killing each other again.

The al-Taqwa mosque the day after it was bombed. 

About 200 metres from Tripoli's al-Taqwa mosque, Alan Dakkoud welcomed a customer into his small café. Regulars sipped on small cups of thick Turkish coffee, discussing whether residents of the Jabal Mohsen neighbourhood would hold a demonstration in support of the Arab Democratic Party (ADP) in Tripoli's main square – something they had been instructed not to do by the country's caretaker Interior Minister.

Annons

Both the ADP and the residents of Jabal Mohsen ascribe to the Alawite faith, an offshoot of Shi'a Islam practised by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Next to Jabal Mohsen is the majority Sunni, anti-Assad neighbourhood of Bab al-Tabbaneh. While the neighbouring districts might share the same city, their convictions – especially when it comes to the conflict in Syria – couldn't be any more disparate, with Jabal Mohsen and the ADP firmly backing the embattled Syrian leader.

Violent clashes between residents of the two areas have become routine since Syria’s civil war broke out two and a half years ago, but a tenuous truce has been maintained for the last few months. Now, however, reports linking the ADP and the Syrian government to two car bombs detonated on August the 23rd outside Sunni mosques – including al-Taqwa, where sheikhs vocal in their opposition to the Syrian regime were holding Friday prayers – have threatened to bring tensions in Lebanon's second city to breaking point.

The land between Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tabbaneh. (Photo by Alex Potter)

The actions and rhetoric of the ADP camp since the bombings have hardly served to alleviate those tensions. Rifaat Ali Eid, the ADP's leader, has defied a court summons from Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces in connection to the twin bombings – a scandal he became embroiled in after it emerged that Ahmad Mohamad Ali, his personal driver and bodyguard, transported a prime suspect in the August bombings across the border into Syria. Ali claims that Eid instructed him to drive the suspect to refuge, but since he disappeared after his summons were issued, the ADP leader hasn't yet had a chance to respond to the allegations.

Annons

Between serving customers in his Bab al-Tabbaneh café, Dakkoud told me that he'd emigrated to Australia in 1979 during the early years of the Lebanese civil war, three years after Syria began occupying his country, where they held a military presence until 2006. Dakkoud eventually returned to Tripoli in the mid-90s, and it's a decision that he appears to regret. "Eid is no good," he said in a surprisingly thick Australian accent. "People like him enflame the situation. But the problem is also the Lebanese army – their tanks are everywhere but they don’t stop the violence."

Confidence in the Lebanese state is limited in Tripoli, particularly in Sunni Bab al-Tabbaneh, where residents believe the Shi'a militant group Hezbollah have the government in the palm of their hand. In fact, after August's twin bombings, the neighbourhood's Salafist leaders began to implement their own security measures, with Lebanese security forces noting an increase of more radical anti-Assad groups in the city, such as Jabhat al-Nusra and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS).

Armed gunmen on the roof of the al-Taqwa mosque.

Through the windows of Dakkoud's café, I began to see people congregate outside the al-Taqwa mosque for Friday prayers. A convoy of six Lebanese army tanks grumbled to a halt nearby, but the surrounding rooftops and the mosque itself were being patrolled by privately-employed security guards in military fatigues, all holding AK-47s and sporting Salafist beards.

Annons

Volunteers from the almost satirically named Utopia – a campaign pressuring the Lebanese government to bring the August bombers to justice – hassled passersby to sign a petition in support of their cause.

"We want 100,000 signatures to pressure the government to speed up the legal process," said Shadi Nashabi, the campaign’s leader. "The Internal Security Forces have said that members of the ADP are associated with this terrorist act, and we are seeking justice. We know that Hezbollah and the Syrian government are pushing the government not to make these decisions. If the government don’t take action, then people here will take matters into their own hands."

And there's no reason to doubt Nashabi's claims; Tripoli's residents are well accustomed to taking matters into their own hands. Grudges are passed down through generations on the streets of Bab al-Tabbaneh and Jabal Mohsen, and endemic unemployment means many join militias young.

Ahmad Jashir (left) and a friend.

Another Utopia campaigner, 17-year-old Ahmad Jashir, boasted of taking up arms against his neighbours in Jabal Mohsen. "I have many friends fighting, and many have been killed," he said. "Without the state's support, we must defend ourselves. If Jabal Mohsen come down to [demonstrate for the ADP] today with 100 people, then 100 will be killed; if they come with 1,000, then 1,000 will be killed."

As midday prayers ended, the congregation spilled out onto streets around al-Taqwa, many of them heading over to the tables set up by the Utopia campaigners to sign their petition. Among the signees was Bassam Qanaan, a 33-year-old hospitality worker. Qanaan was injured in the Taqwa bombing in August and one of his friends was was killed. Over 20 years ago, during the Syrian army's occupation, his father was shot dead by a Syrian sniper while patrolling Tripoli's Mar Maroun Street.

Annons

"When I was young – when my father was still alive – I had friends who were Alawite. Even after he died, we tried to maintain this friendship, but now such things are almost impossible," Qanaan sighed. "People from both Bab al-Tabbaneh and Jabal Mohsen have lost loved ones. People with nothing have been forced to move away."

Despite signing the Utopia petition, Qanaan was pessimistic about those responsible for his friend's death ever being punished: "I don’t think we will get our justice for these bombings," he said, "because the purveyors of justice are with the ADP."

Haissam Hamzi

Across town, next to the city's port, Haissam Hamzi sat on a plastic chair outside the Salam mosque, the second place of worship targeted in the August bombings. Behind him, labourers on scaffolding continued ploughing away at the mosque's ongoing restoration. Like the kids I met outside al-Taqwa, Hamzi – the personal driver of Bilal Baroudi, the sheikh who'd been conducting Salam's Friday prayers at the time of the explosion – is also a seasoned fighter.

"I have been fighting against Jabal Mohsen for 35 years," he said, shrugging. "When my sons came of age, they fought too. The Alawites will not come down to protest today, but I don't see an end to this conflict. Tripoli is crying."

Hamzi’s prediction proved right: the Alawite supporters of the ADP and residents of Jabal Mohsen didn't end up demonstrating in Tripoli's main square.

Annons

Yesterday, Rifaat Ali Eid's lawyer requested that the summons against his client be dropped. He also requested that Ali, Eid's driver, be released. If Eid successfully avoids his court summons – an action, if local rumours are to be believed, that would most likely be facilitated by pressure from the Syrian regime in league with Hezbollah – Tripoli's Sunni residents are sure to feel an increased sense of abandonment from their state.

And the hostility is already beginning to break through the cracks. Yesterday, Saad Ghieh, a pro-Assad sheikh who was arrested in August for concealing information relating to the twin explosions, was shot dead by unknown gunmen outside his home in Tripoli's al-Bahsa district. Increased security measures have also been planned in the southern city of Nabatiyeh for this Thursday's Ashura – a memorial of the martyr Husayn ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad and the third Shi'a imam – among fears of retributive action

Now, all we can do is wait to see whether Utopia's wish is granted. If so, the truce between Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tabbaneh might continue until the next tinderbox is lit; if not, it may be a pill too bitter for some of Tripoli's residents to swallow.

Follow Martin on Twitter: @scotinbeirut

Twin Blasts in Lebanon's Tripoli Signal Intensifying Unrest

Lebanon's Sunni Child Soldiers

People in Lebanon Are Killing Each Other Over Syria