“One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter”

Sitting in the office, I hear reporters talking live about clashes in Lebanon. These reporters inform and entertain through a TV screen dangling from the wall in this fittingly dim hall. Are we on the verge of yet another war in the region?

People wonder why I am usually morbid in my moods and opinions. How can I not be? There is occupation and civil war in Iraq, occupation and apartheid in Palestine, internal turmoil in Egypt, war in Somalia, multiple problems in Jordan, backwardness in Saudi Arabia, armed division in Sudan, separatism in Algeria, estrangement in Morocco and Tunisia, painful neutrality in the United Arab Emirates and other Gulf states, and now — what seems to be a hideous incarnation of civil war in Lebanon.

The situation in Lebanon needn’t be assessed by an amateur such as me. I am far removed from politics, or so I am inclined to believe. Yet the basic sense behind this split is illusive – it’s a power game. Seduce one part with money and political support, two things very much needed after the Israeli Aggression War last summer, and listen to the popular eloquence of the other, enveloped in religious-political aims.

Rest assured: worse things will happen. People will not be burning tires a week from now, and there won’t be only five or six dead. Those in power should stop this mockery and rise above their differences. Have they ever heard of the term “mob behavior?”

Some things, when unleashed, are impossible to contain. Listen to this Hariri and Nasrallah and stop toying with people’s lives.

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