Lebanon profile

Map of Lebanon

One of the most complex and divided countries in the region, Lebanon has been on the fringes, and at times at the heart, of the Middle East conflict surrounding the creation of Israel.

Since a resurgence of hostilities in 2006, when Israel launched a major military campaign against the Lebanon-based Shia Muslim armed group Hezbollah, the country has struggled to regain the relative stability it enjoyed after the 1975-1990 civil war.

A small, mountainous country, Lebanon was under French mandate until independence in 1943. Its population is a mixture of Christian sects, Sunni Muslims, Shia Muslims, Druze and others, having been a refuge for the region's persecuted minorities.

At a glance

View of the corniche (seafront) in Beirut, Lebanon

Beirut has regained some of its reputation as a 'Paris of the East'

  • Conflicts: A country full of promise after civil war between 1975 and 1990, Lebanon was again hit by war in 2006
  • Politics: Government collapsed in January 2011; new government was only formed after five months of wrangling
  • International: An expanded multinational UN peacekeeping force is being deployed to police a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon

Country profiles compiled by BBC Monitoring

Government structures are divided between the various groups. Lebanon has also seen several large influxes of Palestinian refugees, most of whom have limited legal status.

From 1975 until the early 1990s Lebanon suffered a bloody civil war in which regional powers - particularly Israel, Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organisation - used the country as a battlefield for their own conflicts.

Syrian troops moved in shortly after the war started. Israeli troops invaded in 1978 and again in 1982 before pulling back to a self-declared "security zone" in the south from which they withdrew in May 2000.

Syria exerts considerable political clout in Lebanon, although it withdrew its troops in 2005, ending a 29-year military presence.

This followed the assassination in Beirut of former prime minister Rafik Hariri. Lebanese groups then in opposition accused Syria of involvement; Damascus denied the charge. Huge pro- and anti-Syria rallies were held in Beirut, triggering the government's downfall and the Syrian pullout. The Hariri case appeared to have taken a major step forward on 1 March 2009 when an international court into the killing opened in the Hague.

By autumn 2010, the issuing of indictments over the Hariri killing was thought to be imminent, raising fears that if the UN-led tribunal accuses the Syrian- and Iranian-backed militant Shia group Hezbollah of involvement in his murder, this could spark off a new round of sectarian conflict.

Political parties

  • March 14 - Pro-western alliance led by Saad Hariri; named after mass demonstrations that followed killing of Saad Hariri's father, ex-premier Rafik Hariri; March 14-led coalition government was toppled by Hezbollah in January 2011
  • Hezbollah - Pro-Syrian Shia political party with a large armed wing that resisted Israel in the war of July 2006. The United States consider it to be a terrorist organisation
  • Amal - Pro-Syrian Shia political party led by parliamentary Speaker Nabih Berri; allied with Hezbollah
  • Free Patriotic Movement - Largely Christian party led by former army chief Michel Aoun; has ties with Hezbollah

The UN has demanded the dismantling of all armed groups in Lebanon, including Palestinian militias and the military wing of Hezbollah, which controls much of southern Lebanon.

When Hezbollah militia seized two Israeli soldiers in a raid in July 2006, Israel responded with a 34-day military offensive and a blockade. Around 1,000 Lebanese, most of them civilians, were killed. The damage to civilian infrastructure was wide-ranging.

International peacekeepers were drafted in to help police a UN-brokered ceasefire. But Hezbollah's leader has rejected calls for the movement to disarm and political divisions in Beirut cloud the issue of what should be done about the group's military presence in the south.

With its high literacy rate and traditional mercantile culture, Lebanon has traditionally been an important commercial hub for the Middle East.

More on This Story

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

More Middle East stories

RSS

Features & Analysis

Elsewhere on BBC News

Programmes

  • Rhys Ifans in AnonymousTalking Movies Watch

    A new historical thriller is reigniting the age-old debate over the authorship of Shakespeare's body of work

bbc.co.uk navigation

BBC © 2011 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.