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Turkish PM warns sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affect region

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  • Turkish PM warns sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affect region

    Turkish prime minister warns sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affect
    region

    International Herald Tribune
    The Associated Press
    Wednesday, January 3, 2007

    BEIRUT, Lebanon

    Turkey's prime minister warned that growing sectarian tensions in Lebanon
    will affect the entire Middle East if left unchecked and offered to mediate
    in the political crisis if asked by rival factions.
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived here on a one-day visit
    for talks with feuding Lebanese leaders on the country's deepening political
    crisis.

    Shortly after his arrival, Erdogan met with Lebanese premier Fuad Saniora
    whose Western-backed government is facing increasing pressure in the form of
    street protests led by Hezbollah and other opposition groups.

    "I told Saniora that sectarian differences will leave repercussions on the
    region," Erdogan told reporters.

    "I also told him that all parties in Lebanon and all states in the region
    must act to solve this problem," Erdogan said, stressing that a solution to
    the Lebanese crisis should be reached through dialogue.

    Erdogan's visit came as the growing political and sectarian tensions among
    Lebanese factions threaten to tear the country apart. It also came more than
    a week after Arab League chief Amr Moussa said that his efforts have failed
    to reach a solution to the crisis.

    Tensions between pro- and anti-Syrian groups erupted when six pro-Hezbollah
    Cabinet ministers resigned in November after Saniora rejected their demand
    for a new national unity government that would give Hezbollah and its allies
    a veto power on key Cabinet decisions.

    Erdogan met Saniora who has been living at his office complex in central
    Beirut amid a tight security cordon near the thousands of Hezbollah
    supporters and allies camping nearby.

    Erdogan, speaking in Turkish, said Turkey was not mediating in the Lebanese
    crisis but was ready to do so if asked to help by feuding parties.

    Saniora said because of its close ties with the Arab world, Turkey can play
    "an important role" in promoting a solution to the Lebanese crisis.

    "We stressed on stability in Lebanon and its impact on the region," he said.

    Before meeting with Lebanon's president and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri,
    a Hezbollah ally, Erdogan flew by a Turkish military helicopter to southern
    Lebanon where he inspected Turkish troops serving with the U.N. peacekeeping
    force known as UNIFIL. He reviewed an honor guard, thanked troops for their
    service and had lunch with military officers.

    Some 260 Turkish troops, deployed near the southern port city of Tyre, are
    helping rebuild bridges and roads damaged in last summer's war between
    Hezbollah and Israel. Turkish officials said that the total number of
    Turkish personnel in Lebanon would ultimately reach 681, including sailors
    and engineers.

    Erdogan also said he will meet later Wednesday with legislator Mohammed
    Raad, head of Hezbollah's 11-member parliamentary bloc.

    While Erdogan was meeting Saniora, thousands of Armenians, raising Lebanese
    and Armenian flags, gathered in the streets north of Beirut shouting slogans
    against the Turkish premier's visit, witnesses said. All shops in the
    Armenian neighborhood of Bourj Hammoud north of Beirut closed for a couple
    of hours.

    "Turkey, Israel's strategic ally, cannot keep peace in Lebanon," read a
    placard by the protesters. The protesters dispersed peacefully but the
    demonstration caused a traffic jam on Beirut's northern highway.

    Ahead of Erdogan's arrival, about 100 Armenian citizens, waving Lebanese
    flags, also gathered outside the Beirut airport to protest his visit.

    In October, thousands from Lebanon's 80,000-100,000 strong Armenian
    community rallied in downtown Beirut to protest Turkish participation in the
    U.N. peacekeeping force because they blame Turkey's Ottoman rulers for the
    mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century.
    Turkey, a U.S. ally and NATO's only predominantly Muslim member, has close
    ties to both Israel and Arab states.

    hd-aj
    http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007 /01/03/africa/ME_GEN_Lebanon_Turkey.php
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