http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB113450855096321557-lMyQjAxMDE1MzI0OTUy
MDk4Wj.html
 
  

The Murder of a Journalist

By CLAUDIA ROSETT
December 14, 2005


At a rally of the terrorist group Hezbollah in Lebanon this past March,
among the chants of "Death to America" and the banners lauding Syria, some
of the demonstrators brandished posters that threatened, in Arabic: "We are
going to sweep Gebran Tueni from Lebanon."

That is what someone has now done, with the car-bombing Monday on the
outskirts of Beirut that murdered Tueni, Lebanon's leading newspaperman in
the struggle for a free and democratic society. Tueni's assassination comes
not only as a loss to the Lebanese. It's also a hideous affront to the
entire Free World.

Coming within hours of the latest U.N. report of the investigation into the
February bomb assassination in Beirut of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri, Tueni's death also raises an important question: Is it enough
to simply wait upon the further findings of this U.N. process, however
admirably diligent it has been in digging into the affairs of the prime
suspect -- the Syrian regime of Bashar Assad? In the matter of Lebanon's
afflictions, Tueni himself spent years telling us what the problem was, and
the direction he pointed was not only Syria, but Iran.

 [Gebran Tueni]
<http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/EG-AA070_rosett_2005121319333
0.jpg> 
'They can kill one, two, three of us,' but then they are 'finished.'

                

You had to meet Gebran Tueni. He was a cross between the hard-hitting
journalists of legend and the courageous democratic politicians of the
Middle East who too often end up jailed, exiled or killed for their beliefs.
He played one of the leading roles in the democratic Cedar Revolution that
swept Lebanon this spring and was elected this year to the Lebanese
parliament.

I met Gebran Tueni twice. The first time was in 2002, before the Cedar
Revolution had splashed Lebanon's red, white and green flags across the
front pages of Western newspapers. In those days, Syria's generation-long
chokehold still imposed on many Lebanese a terrified silence. I had gone to
Lebanon trying to judge the strength of the democratic movement beneath the
Syrian gloom. Tueni had been speaking up for years, and I paid him a call at
his newspaper's office, then in the bustling Hamra section of Beirut, not
far from the seaside headquarters of Syria's secret police.

A brisk, trim man with a neat mustache, Tueni welcomed me to an office
filled with small figurines of roosters, both small and large, dignified and
whimsical. He collected them, he said -- the rooster being the logo of his
newspaper, An-Nahar, a name which he translated for me as "The Morning."
Founded by Tueni's grandfather in the 1930s, and passed from father to son
for three generations, An-Nahar was for Gebran Tueni not only a family
business but a vital trust. Seated behind his grandfather's desk, he
explained that his aim was to cover the full spectrum of Lebanese news and
debate, to give voice to "Muslims, Christians, leftists, rightists." As a
Lebanese patriot, he refused to be cowed by Syrian censorship, and in 2000
had made the first explicit call by a major Lebanese journalist for Syria to
get its troops out of Lebanon. "If you accept to enter the game of
blackmailing, it's your fault," he said. "We try to have an independent
paper."

Asked about the dangers of such integrity, he catalogued quickly that he had
been shot twice, in 1976 and 1989; kidnapped briefly in 1976; and exiled in
1990 for three years.

Tueni's defiance of despotic rule extended not only to Syrian occupation but
to the presence of Hezbollah in Lebanese politics. He described Hezbollah as
"an imported product from Iran. It has nothing to do with Lebanese
identity." He went on to explain that Hezbollah is "a direct threat, acting
in Lebanon like a state within a state," with "weapons everywhere."
Hezbollah, he said, builds schools, hospitals, provides free education to
children of poor families -- "but what are they teaching?" Hezbollah's
strategy, he said, "is to transform us into an Islamic republic." Tueni
described Iran as providing the weapons and the funding, and Syria as
providing the cover.

Tueni saw democracy as the only acceptable answer. He had no illusions that
it would be easy going: "Just to talk about democracy, it's not a cocktail
party," he said, "You have to work at it."

When I returned to Lebanon in March of this year, Tueni was hard at work. He
had moved his newspaper to new headquarters in the center of Beirut. The
offices now looked out appropriately enough onto Martyr's Square, which had
become the gathering place for the Lebanese democratic protests Hariri's
assassination had catalyzed the previous month. An-Nahar was chronicling not
only the Lebanese democratic movement, but signs of political dissent within
Syria itself.

Tueni was working around the clock, both putting out the newspaper and
meeting with organizers of the Lebanese opposition. The aim, he said, was to
"restore democracy so we can have elections, and then we can compete with
each other." On the broader front, asked about the prospects for democracy
in Iraq, he had no doubts: "George Bush is doing the right job in the Middle
East for us, believe me." Tueni's concern was that Lebanon, with its rich
pre-Syrian legacy of democratic institutions, should have the same chance:
"We really think if the big issue is about the Middle East, about changing
the world, Lebanon is the answer."

An-Nahar's new building had armed guards and bullet-proof security shields
and doors. But sitting in his corner office, with its big picture windows,
not far from the spot where Hariri was murdered, Tueni seemed both brave and
terribly vulnerable. I asked him if his own life was in danger. He said he
expected a wave of Syrian-backed "assassinations, booby-trapped cars," but
did not think that could stop Lebanon's democratic movement: "They can kill
one, two, three of us," but then they are "finished."

He paused and smiled, "Better," he said, if they stop at "one."

They didn't. Gebran Tueni has now become the latest victim in a series of
terrorist bombings that are an assault not only on Lebanese democracy, but
on all those in the Middle East -- or anywhere else, for that matter -- who
believe government should be a civil compact, not a rule of violence and
fear. The urgent question by now is not only who precisely gave the order or
laid the bomb, but who will act to put an end to this terror, and how.

Ms. Rosett is a journalist-in-residence with the Foundation for the Defense
of Democracies.

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