9 Alawites wounded in wave of north Lebanon attacks
AFP, Saturday 2 Nov 2013
Nine Alawite workers were wounded Saturday when unknown gunmen stopped the bus they were travelling on and opened fire at the entry of Tripoli's Sunni Bab Al-Tebbaneh


A wave of attacks motivated by sectarianism in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli has wounded 19 members of the minority Alawite sect this week, a security official told AFP Saturday.

The attacks come after a week-long battle between Alawite fighters in Tripoli's Jabal Mohsen neighbourhood and Sunni militants in the neighbouring Bab al-Tebbaneh area that killed 14 people from both sides.

Nine Alawite workers were wounded on Saturday when Alawite gunmen stopped the bus they were travelling in and opened fire.

"The gunmen opened fire at the bus and then beat some of the workers travelling in it. All nine Alawites had either gunshot or beating wounds and were taken to hospital for treatment," the security official said.

"The bus they were on stopped at the entry of (Tripoli's Sunni) Bab al-Tebbaneh. That's when the gunmen attacked," the official added.

A doctor who treated the men said none had been injured critically.

Three more Alawites suffered knife wounds on Saturday after they were attacked by unknown men in Tripoli's central Tal Square.

Another man, who works for the city municipality, was also attacked by a knife-wielding assailant in a separate incident.

Earlier this week, six other Alawites were wounded in attacks against the community in the city.

Tripoli is Lebanon's second city and is the scene of frequent Syria-linked battles, that pit Sunnis from Bab al-Tebbaneh against Alawites in Jabal Mohsen.

Most Sunnis support Syria's revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, while Alawites, who belong to the same Shia-offshoot sect as Assad, support his regime.

The latest fighting ended when the army deployed along Syria Street, which separates the two districts and acts as the makeshift frontline.

Tripoli's population is 80 percent Sunni and 11 percent Alawite.

Speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, a barber from Jabal Mohsen who works in central Tripoli said he is afraid of going to work.

"Ever since the latest battle ended, I've received threats by phone. I'm scared of going to (central) Tripoli. I'm thinking of closing my shop down," he said.

Many of Tripoli's residents long for peace, as every fresh outbreak of violence forces schools and universities to close.

"I condemn these attacks (against Alawites)," said 35-year-old Sunni resident, Khaled al-Rafei.

"What happened today is bad and the state must detain whoever was behind the attacks, whatever their political or sectarian affiliations."

Lebanon was dominated by Damascus for 30 years until 2005, and its population is deeply divided into pro- and anti-Assad camps.

The violence raging in Tripoli now is in part the legacy of this intervention.

Tripoli's sectarian and political divisions were further aggravated earlier this year when the powerful Shia movement Hezbollah openly admitted sending fighters to support Assad's troops in Syria.

Tripoli suffered horrific car bomb explosions near two mosques in August, killing 45 people.

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