Middle East & Africa | Militia mayhem

The Middle East has a militia problem

More than a quarter of the region’s 400m people live in states dominated by armed groups

Pro-Iranian Hezbollah militants parade during a ceremony to mark al-Quds International Day in Beirut
Photograph: dpa
|BEIRUT

TO BE lebanese is to see, in every event, the seeds of a new civil war. Recent months have provided ample cause for worry. In March residents of Rmeish, a Christian village in the south, confronted members of Hizbullah, a Shia militia and political party, as they tried to set up a rocket launcher in the town centre. Then on April 7th Pascal Sleiman, an official from the Lebanese Forces (LF), a right-wing Christian party, was abducted near the northern city of Byblos and murdered. The party’s leader was quick to hint at a Hizbullah role (it denied responsibility).

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Militia mayhem”

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