Lebanese soldiers patrol in Beirut on October 22, 2012, in response to violence triggered by the murder of security chief General Wissam al-Hassa. Source: AFP
LEBANESE troops and gunmen exchanged fire in a Sunni district of Beirut on Monday, raising fears Lebanon could be engulfed in sectarian violence.
The outbreak occurred after the murder of a top security official, blamed on Syria.
The army promptly said it was determined to restore order in Lebanon, with the northern port of Tripoli shaken by fighting between partisans and opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad that killed five people.
Lebanon has been on edge since Friday, when police intelligence chief General Wissam al-Hassan died in a Beirut car bombing. That immediately prompted calls for Prime Minister Najib Mikati, whose cabinet is dominated by Damascus ally Hezbollah, to resign.
Amid fears Lebanon will be further affected by the conflict in Syria, the envoys to Beirut of the UN Security Council's permanent members met President Michel Sleiman and condemned any attempt to destabilise the situation and called for national unity.
The army is "committed to its role of stopping security breaches and maintaining civil order," a statement from the high command said.
"Recent developments prove decidedly that the country is going through a critical time, and the level of tension in some areas has reached unprecedented levels," it said.
It will take "resolute measures, particularly in areas of mounting sectarian friction... to prevent the assassination of martyred General Wissam al-Hassan from being exploited as an opportunity to murder the nation as a whole."
The military also appealed to all political forces to be wary of their words and any calls for mobilisation, "because the fate of the nation is at stake."
Lebanon is a multi-faith country in which Christians, Shiite and Sunni Muslims each make up about one-third of the population. It has a complex, but unwritten arrangement under which the president must always be a Maronite Christian, the premier a Sunni and the speaker of parliament a Shiite.
The army statement came as troops responded after being fired on as they tried to clear a road in a Sunni district of Beirut that had been blocked by partisans of opposition leader Saad Hariri despite his calls for them to stay off the streets.
One of the gunmen told AFP a local resident had been killed in the shooting.
In the northern port of Tripoli, a Sunni bastion where opposition to Assad is strong, a woman and four youths died during fighting between Sunnis and Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam to which Assad belongs, security sources said.
A four-year-old girl was wounded, as were three soldiers hit as troops attempted to restore calm.
Clashes have erupted regularly in Tripoli as tensions spill over the border from Syria, where a 19-month-old anti-regime revolt has left more than 34,000 people dead.
In the capital, six people were wounded after the army made a pre-dawn sweep through the Sunni district of Tariq Jdideh in pursuit of armed men, and automatic weapons and anti-tank rocket fire could be heard.
Hariri, a former premier who heads Lebanon's parliamentary opposition, said he was determined to oust the government of Prime Minister Najib Mikati "by peaceful and democratic means."
Sunnis are furious over the perceived Syrian assassination of Hassan, also a Sunni, who was noted for pursuing alleged Syrian crimes in Lebanon, including the 2005 assassination of Hariri's father, Rafiq.
Hassan was laid to rest on Sunday amid calls for Mikati to stand down.
Hezbollah is a strong ally of Assad and of Iran. Its militia, which never disarmed after the 1975-90 civil war, is the most powerful military force in the country.
The funeral for Hassan, who was intelligence chief of the Internal Security Forces and a strong Assad opponent, had been billed as an opportunity to protest Syrian meddling in Lebanon but the mood quickly turned to fury at Mikati.
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.
Siniora said the "government is responsible for the crime that killed Wissam ... That is why he must go."
Mikati said on Saturday he would stay on, at President Michel Sleiman's request, to avoid a "political vacuum" in volatile Lebanon.
Following the funeral, a few hundred young men tried to storm the Serail, the seat of government, but were driven back by police firing in the air and using tear gas.
Later, Hariri appealed to his partisans "to stay off the streets, because we want to oust this government by peaceful and democratic means."
Lebanese university professor Ghassan al-Azzi said Hariri is focusing his political fire on Mikati, rather than taking Hezbollah head on, because "if you take Hezbollah on directly, it means without a doubt that you are in favour of civil war."
Clashes between Sunni and Shiite gunmen in Beirut in 2008 brought Lebanon close to the brink of a new civil war.
On Sunday, US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton spoke with Mikati by telephone and offered assistance in the search for Hassan's killers, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.
Meanwhile, the ambassadors of Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States expressed their "unequivocal condemnation of any attempt to destabilise Lebanon through political assassination."
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