Lebanese Urged to 'Turn the Page' on Civil War Anniversary

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460
  • W460
  • W460

Lebanese newspapers published front-page appeals Wednesday for readers to "turn the page" on sectarian divisions that persist more than four decades after the outbreak of the country's civil war.

On April 13, 1975, clashes erupted in Beirut between Lebanese Christians and Palestinians, marking the beginning of the 15-year war that left more than 150,000 dead.

Although the conflict officially ended in 1990, Lebanon remained plagued by instability, corruption, and bitterly divided political factions.

"April 13: turn the page," read the boldface headline on the front page of Wednesday's French-language Lebanese daily, L'Orient Le Jour.

"The Lebanese are therefore called to turn the page on conflicts and internal strife, not to fall into denial... but to adopt an approach based on reconciliation," it wrote.

Lebanon's war ravaged the country and left 17,000 people missing, but an amnesty allowed many of its key protagonists to subsequently become leading political figures.

Continued rivalries among those figures have paralyzed government institutions: Lebanon's parliament has twice extended its own mandate and the presidency has been vacant for nearly two years.

Above a composite picture depicting iconic Lebanese landmarks, cultural events, and ski slopes, An Nahar also asked its readers on Wednesday to "turn the page".

"You're fragmented and sectarian. You think of your Lebanon... your religious sect, your interests. So how can you say that you want to turn the page?" read its editorial section.

And al-Mustaqbal encouraged its Lebanese readers to "turn the page again. Let's build a nation of love and peace."

The As Safir daily, which faces possible closure due to funding challenges, published the same headline alongside a story about Lebanese women whose sons went missing during the war.

Comments 5
Thumb justin 13 April 2016, 10:24

What have the Lebanese learned from the atrocities and tragedies of the ugly civil war: Nothing. We are more sectarian and more divided then ever before. We have no idea how to build a nation and what citizenship means. We do not have the fundamentals to build a nation.

Thumb justice 13 April 2016, 13:08

إستجواب عدد من الموقوفين واستمهال آخرين في قضية خطف الطفلين لاهالا ونوح الأمين والادعاء عليهم بعقوبة تصل الى السجن بين 7 و20 عاماً.

But Smaha got only 13 years for plotting with a foreign government, transporting explosives, and having the intent to kill civilians and ignite strife.

Thumb chrisrushlau 13 April 2016, 16:43

Article 24, giving half of Parliament to the dwindling (one-quarter?) Christian minority. If Lebanon had a functional legal system, it could make it illegal to talk about the Constitution.

Missing callaeci 13 April 2016, 20:41

Wa2afna al 3add, those who don't like it can go to hell.

Default-user-icon naja (Guest) 14 April 2016, 00:55

What a sad, pathetic and poor reaction to the first initiative to do the kind of remembrance the state should actually do. Negative, frustrated posts and ill-thought commentaries, when we should actually be uniting to make this day a day of mourning, with flags at half-mast and a minute of silence in every government office and every school and every company. We should be saluting these newspapers for doing what our leaders should have done long time ago: mark this as the day of forgiveness.