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Lebanese MP 'killed in bombing' | |||||
Antoine Ghanim, a member of the Maronite Phalange party, and at least three others died when his car exploded in the eastern Sin al-Fil district. The blast also damaged several nearby buildings and set four cars alight. The son of the Phalange leader Amin Gemayel, Pierre Gemayel, was shot dead by gunmen in November 2006.
Five other high-profile anti-Syrian Lebanese figures have been killed since the assassination of the former Prime Minister, Rafik Hariri, in 2005. The Syrian government has denied any involvement in the killings. Political deadlock The large car bomb exploded in late afternoon near the al-Hayik roundabout in Sin el-Fil. Local television stations soon broadcast pictures of rescuers dragging charred bodies from the scene of the blast. Several seriously injured and burnt people were also taken away by ambulances.
Reports said Mr Ghanim had removed his parliamentary number plate and put it in the back of the car in an attempt to reduce his profile. Mr Ghanim was a member of the governing 14 March Movement and his death has reduced the bloc's majority in the Lebanese Chamber of Deputies to just two. It also comes less than a week before Lebanese MPs are scheduled to meet to elect a new president. Under Lebanon's sectarian political system, the post is reserved for a Maronite Christian. The BBC's Jim Muir in Beirut says that despite the continuing deadlock between pro- and anti-Syrian factions in parliament, there had been signs of moderation and a will for dialogue between the two sides ahead of the vote. Tensions are now bound to rise, our correspondent says. In July, a Muslim member of the movement, Walid Eido, was among at least 10 people killed in an explosion in Beirut's Manara neighbourhood. | |||||