Child killed in Lebanon clash over Syria: Security
AFP, Tuesday 22 Oct 2013
The 13-year-old victim was from Jabal Mohsen, a majority Alawite neighbourhood in Tripoli whose residents support Al-Assad's regime


A 13-year-old child was killed and 11 other people wounded in a gunfight in Lebanon's Tripoli Tuesday between supporters and opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a security official said.

Clashes broke out Monday night, as an interview with Assad was being aired on television. There was relative calm on Tuesday, but fighting resumed during the evening.

"Fighting on several fronts in Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tebbaneh has killed a 13-year old boy and wounded 11 other people, some of them critically," the official told AFP.

The army was deployed in the area, and shot back at the sources of fire, he added.

The 13-year-old victim was from Jabal Mohsen, a majority Alawite neighbourhood in Tripoli whose residents support Assad.

The majority of Bab al-Tebbaneh's residents are Sunni, and support the anti-Assad revolt in neighbouring Syria.

Both neighbourhoods are extremely poor and marginalised, and lack adequate medical facilities.

Sipping coffee on a roadside, Bilal Allush, a 30-year-old vegetable seller from a nearby neighbourhood, told AFP "we all want this violence to end.

"Those people fighting, they are just criminals. Meanwhile, whenever there's a clash, people like me can't work and our families suffer."

Bab al-Tebbaneh is home to Tripoli's main vegetable market, where vendors like Allush can buy in bulk.

"I couldn't go buy vegetables from the market, so I haven't made any money today. My family survives on my daily income. I have four children," he said.

Violence has escalated in Tripoli, Lebanon's second city, since the beginning of Syria's uprising.

Lebanon is deeply divided into pro- and anti-Damascus camps.

Divisions have grown even deeper after Shiite militant group Hezbollah admitted in May it was sending fighters into Syria to support Assad's troops.

Sunnis have also crossed the border to fight alongside the rebels.

Lebanon was dominated politically and militarily by Damascus for 30 years until 2005.

The Syrian regime still exerts significant influence over its smaller neighbour through its allies .

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