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Samir Kassir

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Samir Kassir

Samir Kassir (سمير قصير in Arabic) (May 5 1960June 2 2005) was a university professor, journalist and historian born to a Lebanese Palestinian father and a Syrian mother. He held both Lebanese and French nationality. A prominent left-wing activist, he was a strong advocate of freedom for the Palestinians, democracy in Lebanon and Syria and a vocal critic of the Syrian presence in Lebanon. He was assassinated on 2 June 2005 and his murderers remain unknown. A French investigation is currently underway but its results have yet to be released.

Life

Samir Kassir's journalistic career began when he was a seventeen year old secondary school student at the Lycée Français de Beyrouth, with unsigned contributions to the Lebanese Communist Party newspaper Al-Nidā'. The same year, he began contributing to the French-language daily L'Orient-Le Jour, one of Lebanon's principal newspapers.

From 1981 to 2000, he contributed to the French international political review Le Monde Diplomatique. In 1982 and 1983 he edited the newsletter Le Liban en Lutte (Struggling Lebanon), which was dedicated to the Lebanese resistance against the Israeli occupation. In 1984 he gained a DEA (roughly equivalent to a Master's degree in the British university system) in philosophy and political philosophy from the Université de Paris I. From 1984 to 1985 he edited the weekly Al-Yawm as-Sābi`, and from 1986 to 2004 he was a member of the editorial board of the Revue des Etudes Palestiniennes, the French-language journal of the Institute of Palestine Studies. From 1988 to 1989 he contributed to the London-based pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat.

Samir Kassir obtained his PhD in modern and contemporary history from the Université de Paris IV in 1990, with a thesis on the Lebanese Civil War. His books, in French and Arabic, include a history of Beirut and a study of the Lebanese Civil War. He also co-authored a book about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and Palestinian-French relations. In 1995 he founded a new monthly political and cultural review, L'Orient-L'Express, which he edited until it ceased publication in 1998, from lack of interest and pressure from the advertising industry. From that year on he was a professor at the "Institut des sciences politiques de l'Université Saint-Joseph" in Beirut.

It was also in 1998 that Kassir became an editorial writer for the daily Al-Nahar newspaper. He became widely known for his popular weekly column in which he wrote strong articles against the pro-Syrian regime. He also made frequent appearances on several television stations as a political analyst on news programs.

Known for his unrelenting courage, Kassir was unafraid of expressing trenchant opinions. He advocated democracy in both Lebanon and Syria, and continuously spoke for the rights of the Palestinians. It was his non-compromising views on the Ba'ath regime that many believe led to his assassination.

He maintained a keen and sympathetic interest in Syria despite his criticism of its involvement in Lebanon, and was on close terms with many Syrian intellectuals, including those involved in the Damascus Spring. He was a founding member of the Democratic Left Movement, which won a seat in the Lebanese parliamentary elections of 2005. Kassir and the party he helped establish were both very influential in triggering the popular upheavals following Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's killing.

Kassir's last book in Arabic concerned the "Damascus Spring" and the consequences for Lebanon of Syrian political developments; Syrian dissident film-maker Omar Amiralay penned its introduction. Before his assassination, he was working on another book about the "Beirut Spring" that aimed to discuss the recent momentous developments in Lebanon, that was supposed to be published by Actes Sud. In February 2006 a book was published with the same title, by Actes Sud, but contained translations of Arabic articles written mainly after Hariri's assassination.

Samir Kassir was a Christian Orthodox married to Giselle Khoury, a talk-show host on Al-Arabiya television. He is survived by two daughters, Mayssa and Liana, from a previous marriage.

His wife and a group of Kassir’s friends, students and colleagues from l'Orient Express, including writer Elias Khoury, created the Samir Kassir Foundation. One of the foundation’s objectives would be translating his works into English, Italian, and Norwegian.

A special edition of l'Orient Express was published in November 2005, to celebrate its tenth anniversary, under the title "The Unfinished Spring" and was dedicated in memory of Kassir. This project was initially Kassir's idea who was working on it before he was assassinated.

A square in downtown Beirut, behind the Annahar building, was named in Kassir’s honor. The Samir Kassir Foundation inaugurated a bronze statue of the journalist there on June 2, 2006, exactly a year after his assassination.

Assassination

Kassir was assassinated using a car bomb in Beirut on June 2, 2005. The investigation into his assassination is still underway, but no one has been indicted yet. Since Kassir had been constantly receiving threats from Lebanese and Syrian intelligence officers, there is widespread speculation in Lebanon that the perpetrators were the Lebanese-Syrian security apparatus or remnants of this force (as Syria has claimed that all its intelligence officers were out of Lebanon; in addition, the head of the Lebanese security forces had resigned). The Syrian government has denied these charges.

There was widespread condemnation for the killing and many prominent opposition figures blaming the blast on the Lebanese and Syrian regimes. Among them were Hariri's son, Saad, who said "the blood-stained hands that assassinated Rafiq Hariri are the same ones that assassinated Samir Kassir."

Kassir was among the first victims in the growing list of political assassinations that have occurred in Lebanon in the past few years. These began with the attempted assassination of Marwan Hamadeh and followed with the killing of Rafiq al-Hariri, the former Prime Minister. After Kassir, George Hawi, the former head of the Lebanese Communist Party was targeted by another car-bomb; this was followed by failed assassination attempts at former Interior Minister and former Syrian ally Elias Murr and popular LBCI TV anchorwoman and journalist May Chidiac who survived, but lost an arm and leg. On the 12th of December, Samir Kassir's colleague, An-Nahar chief editor, and top anti-Syria legislator Gebran Tueni, was killed by a car bomb. Pierre Amine Gemayel, the former Minister of Industry, was another victim in the series of assassinations. Gemayel was travelling in his car when gunmen opened fire in broad daylight. MP Walid Eido from the Hariri-led Future movement was killed near the Military Bath of Beirut on June 13th, 2007, when leaving his gym club. Shortly afterwards, MP Antoine Ghanem of the Lebanese Phalanges Party (aka Kataeb Party, was killed in another car bomb on September 19, 2007 in the Sin al-Fil suburb of Beirut. Shortly afterwards, second-in-command of the Lebanese Armed Forces, General Francois al-Hajje was killed in the military-secured suburb of Baabda on December 12, 2007. One month later, security chief and top Lebanese investigator into the International Tribunal for the Hariri assassination was killed in January 2008. Many have blamed Syria for all the recent assassinations of its opponents.

See also

Works

  • Itinéraires de Paris à Jérusalem. La France et le conflit israélo-arabe, 2 volumes, Paris, Revue des études palestiniennes, 1992 et 1993 (with Farouk Mardam-Bey).
  • La guerre du Liban; De la dissension nationale au conflit régional (1975-1982), Paris, Karthala/Cermoc, 1994.
  • Histoire de Beyrouth, Paris, Fayard, 2003.
  • `Askar `ala mén? Lubnan al-jumhúriyya al-mafqúda, Beirut, Dár al-Nahár, 2004. (Soldiers against whom? Lebanon, the lost republic).
  • Dímúqrátiyyat súria wastiqlál lubnan; al-ba`th `an rabí` dimashq, Beirut, Dár al-Nahár, 2004. (Syrian democracy and Lebanese independence: in search of the Damascus Spring).
  • Considerations sur le malheur arabe, Paris, Actes Sud, 2004. Translated and published by, Dár al-Nahár, in November 2005.
  • Liban: Un printemps inachevé, Actes Sud, 2006. Translated from Arabic by Hoda Saliby.
  • L'infelicità araba , Giulio Einaudi editore s.p.a. Torino 2006.
  • Primavere per una Siria Democratica e un Libano Independente, Mesogea by GEm s.r.l. 2006.
  • Das Arabische unglück, Schiler 2006
  • De la desgracia de ser árabe, Almuzara 2006
  • Being Arab, Verso, London 2006
  • Den arabiska olyckan, Ruin, Stockholm 2006

Sources