Lebanon police tear-gas anti-PM protest at funeral

BEIRUT: Lebanese police clashed with protesters trying to storm the prime minister's office in Beirut, amid calls for him to quit after a top security official was killed by a car bomb blamed on...

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AFP
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Lebanon police tear-gas anti-PM protest at funeral
BEIRUT: Lebanese police clashed with protesters trying to storm the prime minister's office in Beirut, amid calls for him to quit after a top security official was killed by a car bomb blamed on Syria.

Officers fired into the air and used tear gas to repel the demonstrators in the hours following the funeral on Sunday of General Wissam al-Hassan.

The event had been billed as an opportunity to protest against Syrian meddling in Lebanon but the mood quickly turned to anger at Prime Minister Najib Mikati, whose government is dominated by pro-Syria parties.

More than 15 members of the security forces were injured in the clashes with protesters outside the Serail, the prime minister's office, according to a statement on Mikati's website.

During funeral orations for the slain police intelligence chief, angry former premier Fuad Siniora called on Mikati to resign, adding his voice to many others since Hassan and two others were killed and 126 wounded on Friday.

Siniora, a leading member of ex-premier Saad Hariri's opposition bloc, said the government was responsible for the death of Hassan and his driver and should go.

After Siniora spoke, a man mounted the podium and cried: "Enough speeches, let's charge the Serail."

A policeman told AFP around 200 "young people headed towards the building in the city centre, but security forces blocked them by firing into the air and using tear gas."

Just hours after the funeral in central Beirut, heavy gunfire could be heard in a Sunni district of west Beirut.

Despite calls for him to quit, Mikati has said he will stay on, at President Michel Sleiman's request, to avoid a "political vacuum" in volatile Lebanon.

The opposition has widely blamed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for Friday's attack in the mostly Christian district of Ashrafieh.

It also holds him responsible for the 2005 assassination of Hariri's father, ex-premier Rafiq Hariri, killed in a huge Beirut blast.

A banner on Sunday proclaimed "Two states, one revolution," an allusion to the 19-month rebellion in Syria that has cost more than 34,000 lives.

After a military ceremony at Internal Security Forces (ISF) headquarters, the bodies of Hassan, 47, and his chauffeur were transported to Martyrs' Square.

After the funeral at the huge Al-Amine Mosque, Hassan was buried in the mausoleum of his mentor, Rafiq Hariri, whose death sparked an outcry that forced Syrian troops to withdraw from Lebanon after three decades of occupation.

The investigation into his death, led by Hassan, pointed the finger at Damascus.