Lebanon frees anti-Assad activist

Military court releases Shadi al-Moulawi whose arrest earlier this month set off deadly clashes in the country’s north.

Shadi al-Mawlawi Moulawi
Shadi al-Moulawi, left, was welcomed by friends and relatives following his release on Tuesday in Tripoli [AFP]

A court in Lebanon has released on bail an activist allied with the Syrian opposition whose arrest earlier this month set off violent clashes that killed at least eight people in the north of the country.

The fighting erupted after Lebanese authorities arrested Shadi al-Moulawi, who Sunni Islamists in Tripoli say was aiding Syrian refugees in northern Lebanon.

He was subsequently charged with membership of a “terrorist” organisation.

The fighting among Lebanese Sunni Islamist opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the Lebanese army and members of Assad’s minority sect in the northern port of Tripoli highlighted the potential of Syria’s 14-month-old uprising to unsettle the sect-based politics of its smaller neighbour.

A judicial source said Moulawi was released on Tuesday on a bail of 500,000 Lebanese pounds ($333) and forbidden to leave the country, adding that the charge levelled against him by a military prosecutor stood.

Syria, which has demanded Lebanon cut the cross-border flow of arms to fighters, has long-standing influence in parts of Lebanon’s security apparatus, military and judiciary, dating back to the Lebanese civil war and its aftermath.

Tripoli is a stronghold of Sunni Islamist sentiment and much of the population backs the uprising against Assad – led by members of Syria’s Sunni majority – which has sprung up alongside mass protests that erupted in Syria in March 2011.

Anger over Moulawi’s arrest led Islamists in the north onto the streets, where confrontations with the Lebanese military came to include residents of a Tripoli district that is home to members of Assad’s Alawite sect.

The unrest has also spread to Beirut, where two people were killed on Monday in fighting between armed men from the Future Movement, loyal to the former prime minister Saad al-Hariri, and members of a pro-Assad Lebanese political party.

Source: News Agencies