Editorial: Message From Lebanon
ON Tuesday, Lebanon took another step on its difficult road to recovery and stability with the release of former Lebanese Christian warlord Samir Geagea after a parliamentary amnesty Monday ended his eleven years in jail. The message for the world was that the Lebanese were putting their past behind them.
Geagea, who was convicted in 1994 for four political murders including the assassination of Prime Minister Rashid Karami, was the only Lebanese warlord ever to pay for his actions, even though cogent criminal cases could at one time or another have probably been made against most of the faction leaders during the bitter civil war.
Geagea had always protested his innocence. When he emerged yesterday he revealed that for most of his sentence he had been kept in solitary confinement in a basement cell beneath the Ministry of Defense. He said his life had been “ very, very hardâ€. But apart from this brief and measured statement about his imprisonment, what he told supporters at Beirut airport as he prepared to fly to an unrevealed destination abroad for medical tests was notably lacking in recrimination.
Indeed, he went out of his way to thank his former political foes including Druze leader Walid Jumblatt and Sunni leader Saad Hariri, son of the murdered former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, for their roles in securing his release. He concluded by calling for national reconciliation and saluted all the people of Lebanon in what he characterized as their struggle for survival. A staunch opponent of Syria’s role in the country, Geagea compared his release from his little prison to Lebanon’s release from the big prison of Syrian influence. He also deplored the continuing campaign of bombings for their clear purpose of undermining newfound peace and amity between Lebanese communities.
What Geagea did not do however was to once again protest his innocence or comment on the fact that he alone, of all Lebanon’s warlords, had been prosecuted and imprisoned. Implicit in everything he said was that the past was the past and that only danger lay in looking back. Instead, he chose to look forward resolutely to a new and independent Lebanon, free of rancor and prejudice.
This is an excellent editorial from The Arab News, noting that in order to move into the future, it’s necessary to move out of the past. In applauding the fact that Samir Geagea did not focus on the past, but instead looked forward to a new Lebanon, the editorial makes it clear what needs to be done throughout the Arab world.
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