BEIRUT (Agencies)
Lebanese soldiers deployed in several mixed Sunni-Shiite streets of Beirut and ended sectarian riots that left at least 14 people injured and several cars and shops smashed.
A new bout of street clashes erupted between armed supporters of rival political factions in the Lebanese capital late on Saturday, a security official said.
"They are armed and throwing stones at each other and the army and security forces have been deployed in force to contain the violence," the official told AFP.
"The army intervened and fired into the air to separate the two sides," he said, adding that the injured were taken to hospital.
Lebanese television reported that several shops were set ablaze, while the security official said one house was burned down and a car was set on fire by Molotov cocktails thrown by the militants.
Security sources said followers of Sunni Muslim Saad al-Hariri's Future Trend movement battled supporters of the Shiite Hezbollah and Amal groups with sticks, knives and stones in Ras al-Nabei, Mazraa and Barboor areas of Beirut.
It was not clear what sparked the night-time clashes but tension has been simmering for weeks. Smaller incidents have been reported almost on daily basis.
Hariri's anti-Syrian ruling coalition is locked in a 15-month-old power struggle against an opposition led by Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and Iran.
The political crisis has left Lebanon without a president since November. It has spilled into deadly street clashes on several occasions over the past year. Last month seven Shiite protesters were shot dead, mainly by Lebanese troops.
On Saturday, scores of Lebanese soldiers fired into the air to disperse rioters from both sides. At least 14 people, many with broken bones or cuts, were injured in the fights.
Some media reported both sides exchanged fire in some places but security sources said most of the shooting was by troops and into the air. |
