A Lebanese army officer was shot dead in
the country’s second city of Tripoli during fighting between rival sects on
Thursday, a security source and state media said.
Lebanon’s National News Agency said masked
men on a motorcycle had opened fire on the officer, Fadi al-Jbaili, at around
6:30 a.m. (0430 GMT), killing him instantly.
Fighting between Tripoli’s Sunni Muslims
and members of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, has killed at
least 28 people over the last two weeks.
Long-running tensions between the two sects
have been made worse by the three-year-old conflict in neighboring Syria, where
mostly Sunni rebels are fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, an
Alawite.
Lebanon, beset by its own internal
sectarian divisions and still recovering from a 1975-90 civil war, has
struggled to control the violence in Tripoli.
On Wednesday, at least three people were
killed in fighting in the northern coastal city, including an 11-year-old boy.
Another officer in Lebanon’s security
forces escaped without injury when gunmen opened fire on him, the National News
agency reported on Thursday.
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