Lebanon’s PSP, FPM Dig up War Past in Heated Dispute

PSP leader Walid Jumblatt receives then FPM chief Michel Aoun at his Clemenceau residence in 2014. (NNA file photo)
PSP leader Walid Jumblatt receives then FPM chief Michel Aoun at his Clemenceau residence in 2014. (NNA file photo)
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Lebanon’s PSP, FPM Dig up War Past in Heated Dispute

PSP leader Walid Jumblatt receives then FPM chief Michel Aoun at his Clemenceau residence in 2014. (NNA file photo)
PSP leader Walid Jumblatt receives then FPM chief Michel Aoun at his Clemenceau residence in 2014. (NNA file photo)

A dispute resurged between Lebanon’s Progressive Socialist Party (PSP) and the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), over recent statements by former MP and PSP leader Walid Jumblatt, in which he lashed out at President Michel Aoun, saying that his son-in-law, former minister Gebran Bassil was seeking to control the government.

Jumblatt said Bassil wanted to have the “vetoing third” in the new government, to be able to tighten his grip on power. He also spoke of “military black rooms that control the judiciary and attack the army commander.”

Bassil’s FPM slammed “the low level of political rhetoric among some of those with dark intentions and malevolent actions, by repeatedly talking about the age of the president of the republic, in contradiction to moral values, or by trying to drive a wedge between the FPM and the Lebanese army.”

Recalling the 1975-90 civil war, the FPM said in a statement: “It is political profanity when we are given lessons in patriotism by those who have killed, kidnapped, attacked the army and seized its equipment and barracks, and established their own sanctuary, rejecting state security.”

The statement added: “The system that struck the legitimacy, seized the country’s resources, and established for 15 years a corrupt rule that led to the collapse of the state, is rejecting the values that President Aoun represents, the state’s legitimacy he embodies and the auditing and accountability he insists on implementing.”

In response, PSP MP Bilal Abdallah criticized those he called “the horns of decadent replies,” writing on Twitter: “An owl, no matter how loud its voice, will not become an eagle, and a cat, no matter how sharp its claws, will not become a tiger…”

PSP Secretary Zafer Nasser, attacked those who “falsified history and caused calamities, woe and oppression… while trying to prove their loyalty to the decision-maker in (the FPM), and almost suffocated with their anger, falling victim to their own evil...”



Israeli Soldiers Open Fire inside a West Bank Hospital While Searching for Fighters’ Bodies

 Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
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Israeli Soldiers Open Fire inside a West Bank Hospital While Searching for Fighters’ Bodies

 Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)

Israeli soldiers opened fire inside a hospital in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday during a raid to seize the bodies of alleged fighters targeted in earlier airstrikes, a Palestinian doctor working at the hospital told The Associated Press.

Soldiers entered the Turkish Hospital complex in Tubas after the bodies of two Palestinians killed and one wounded in airstrikes in the northern West Bank on Tuesday were brought there, said Dr. Mahmoud Ghanam, who works in the hospital’s emergency department. The troops briefly handcuffed and arrested Ghanam and another doctor.

“The army entered in a brutal way, and they were shooting inside the emergency department,” said Ghanam. “They handcuffed us and took me and my colleague.”

The military confirmed that its troops were operating around the hospital searching for those targeted in the airstrikes, which they said had hit a militant cell near the Palestinian town of Al-Aqaba in the Jordan Valley. It denied that troops had entered the hospital building or fired gunshots inside.

The soldiers left after learning that the wounded man had been transferred to another hospital, Ghanam said. The soldiers wanted to take the bodies of the two men killed in the strike, but the hospital’s manager refused to hand over the bodies, Ghanam said.

Israeli raids on hospitals in the West Bank are rare but have grown more common since the start of the Israel-Hamas war. In Gaza, Israeli troops have systematically besieged, raided and damaged many hospitals.

About 800 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack out of Gaza ignited the war there. Israel has carried out near-daily military raids in the West Bank that it says are aimed at preventing attacks on Israelis — attacks which have also been on the rise.

Israel captured the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians seek all three territories for an independent state.