<http://abcnews.go.com/International/print?id=540855>
Protesters Back on Beirut Streets; U.S. Offers Support

Reuters

Mar. 1, 2005 - Hundreds of protesters waving Lebanese flags returned to
central Beirut Tuesday to demand Syria quit Lebanon and the United States
welcomed what it called moves to restore democracy in Lebanon.

 Lebanese officials began a search for a new premier after the government
of Prime Minister Omar Karami resigned Monday following two weeks of
protests, piling more pressure on Damascus, already under fire from the
United States and Israel.

 "Events in Lebanon are moving in a very important direction," Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice said in London. "The Lebanese people are starting to
express their aspirations for democracy ... This is something that we
support very much."

 Thousands of demonstrators turned a square in Beirut into a sea of
Lebanese flags Monday night and exploded into riotous celebration when the
government unexpectedly quit after a parliament debate on the killing of
ex-premier Rafik al-Hariri.

 The jubilant protesters left in the early hours of Tuesday only for a few
hundred to return hours later, vowing to keep up their street protests
until Syrian troops left the country.

 "Our hopes are growing regarding Syria's exit after the resignation of the
government," Patrick Risha, a 22-year-old political science student told
Reuters at Martyrs' Square. "This encourages us to stay here and continue
our protest."

 "We will not go to school. We will keep coming here until (President
Emile) Lahoud is toppled and the Syrians leave Lebanon," Elainne Hajj, 16,
said.

 In London, Rice also called for the withdrawal of Syrian troops and said
Washington fully supported open elections.

 Most of the opposition protesters are Maronite Christians, who have long
opposed Syria's role in Lebanon, Druze and some Sunni Muslims. Shi'ite
Muslims, Lebanon's largest community, have mainly stayed away from the
anti-Syrian rallies.

 PEOPLE POWER

 Newspapers hailed the role of the Lebanese in trying to bring change.

 "Government falls under the pressure of the people and the hammer of the
opposition," said Al-Mustaqbal daily, owned by the late Hariri.

"People power brings down Karami's cabinet," the headline in Beirut's
English-language Daily Star newspaper read.

 "Electricity is in the air. Beirut is a sea of excitement, and activity
and turmoil," it said in an editorial. "The word 'revolution' is on many
lips."

 The Daily Star urged the opposition and loyalists alike to grasp the full
magnitude of the popular movement and heed its wishes for a new Lebanon.

 "And Syria should consider what is happening in a somber manner and not
thwart the ideals demonstrated by Lebanon's youth: It is, indeed, the time
for change," it said.

 Syria plays a dominant role in Lebanon and maintains 14,000 troops there.
Pressure has been growing within Lebanon and from abroad for a complete
military withdrawal.

 Protesters have gathered in Martyrs' Square, which they dubbed Freedom
Square, ever since Hariri's assassination on Feb. 14 to demand the
withdrawal of Syrian troops and the resignation of all top pro-Syrian
political and security officials.

 Opposition deputies, many war-time foes, have joined forces, capitalizing
on fury over Hariri's death to pressure those they blame -- Syria and the
government. Syria has denied any role.

 The country's top two pro-Syrian officials, the president and Parliament
Speaker Nabih Berri, were in contact to discuss a new government, officials
said. Lahoud was set to call for consultations this week with parliamentary
deputies to choose a successor.

 "There are no fears whatsoever of a constitutional vacuum," one
presidential aide said in response to speculation that finding a new
premier could take a long time.

 Opposition figures were set to meet Wednesday to agree on their next move.

 They looked set to demand a government made up of people who would not be
running for office in May general elections and who would be acceptable to
most Lebanese. They would also demand the resignation of security chiefs,
political sources said.

 Copyright 2005 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright � 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures

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