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Lebanese Christian Civil War Foes Reconcile After 40 Years 


FILE - Lebanese Forces party leader Samir Geagea speaks during an interview with AFP in Maarab, northeast of Beirut, April 26, 2012.
FILE - Lebanese Forces party leader Samir Geagea speaks during an interview with AFP in Maarab, northeast of Beirut, April 26, 2012.

Christian rivals from the Lebanese civil war, Samir Geagea and Suleiman Frangieh, shook hands with each other Wednesday, marking a formal reconciliation to end more than four decades of enmity.

Geagea, leader of the Lebanese Forces political party, and Frangieh, head of the Marada party, have been foes since the early days of the 1975-90 civil war.

The two parties had armed militias during the conflict that battled each other. The war, which drew in regional powers, included fighting between the country's main sects and rival factions within those sects.

The men, both Maronite Christians, met to reconcile at the seat of the sect's Patriarch Bechara al-Rai in Bkerki, north of Beirut. They shook hands with Rai and then with each other, after several failed reconciliation attempts over the years.

Geagea has been accused of leading a raid in 1978 on the home of Frangieh's father, Tony Franjieh, a rival Maronite Christian chieftain, who was killed with his wife, daughter and others. Geagea has said he was wounded before reaching Frangieh's house and did not take part himself.

This was the second rapprochement of recent years between civil war Maronite Christian rivals.

In January 2016, Geagea endorsed Michel Aoun for the Lebanese presidency, ending his own rival candidacy for the position, which must be held by a Maronite Christian under Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system.

Geagea and Aoun, who fought each other in the civil war, have been on opposite sides of the political divide since Syrian forces withdrew from Lebanon in 2005.

President Aoun is a political ally of the Iran-backed Shiite group Hezbollah, whereas Geagea is a staunch opponent of the group. Frangieh is a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a Hezbollah ally.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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