Gunfire broke out in south Beirut on Tuesday night when Hezbollah fought off an apparent attempt by Lebanese security forces to arrest the man convicted of assassinating former prime minister Rafik Hariri.
Hezbollah gunmen fight off bid to arrest Rafik Hariri’s killer
— Gulf Headlines (@GulfHeadlines) March 3, 2021
article author: NAJIA HOUSSARIAuthor: Wed, 2021-03-03 01:56
BEIRUT: Gunfire broke out in south Beirut on Tuesday night when Hezbollah fought off an apparent attempt by Lebanese security forces to arrest the... pic.twitter.com/4UweB456fj
Information circulating on social media said officers tried to raid a house thought to be the hideout of Salim Ayyash, 57, who is wanted by the Lebanese state at the request of the International Tribunal for Lebanon. Hezbollah fighters opened fire, surrounded the security patrol, and detained its members and their vehicles.
Amateur video footage on social media shows shots being fired and a Hezbollah fighter shouting: “Attack them and disarm them.”
An activist close to Hezbollah told Arab News: “The security patrol wanted to arrest wanted suspects accused of a crime, it is not true that there was a clash with Hezbollah."
Rafik Hariri died in a suicide bombing of his car in Beirut in February 2005. The Special Tribunal tried Ayyash in his absence, and sentenced him to life imprisonment in August 2020 for conspiracy to commit a terrorist act. Hezbollah has said it will never hand him over.
No one seems to care about Rafik Hariri's killer, a #Hezbollah operative, being sentenced to life in prison in absentia - a sentence likely to remain "ink on paper"
— Timour Azhari (@timourazhari) December 11, 2020
It's inconvenient for Rafik's son, Saad, who is trying to form his 4th govt with Hezbollahhttps://t.co/CR4ZEJnCK6
This article has been adapted from its original source.