Kassir was assassinated using a
car bomb in Beirut on 2 June 2005, just a few days after the general elections. The investigation into his assassination directs to
Unit 121 Of
Hezbollah as part of its policy to eliminate political and journalist threat of those who oppose them and the Syrian government's influence in Lebanon. On 4 June, a funeral ceremony was performed for him in Beirut with the attendance of hundreds.
Aftermath There was widespread condemnation for the killing and many prominent opposition figures blaming the blast on the Lebanese and Syrian governments. Among them were Hariri's son,
Saad Hariri, who said "the blood-stained hands that assassinated Rafiq Hariri are the same ones that assassinated Samir Kassir." Moreover,
Elias Atallah, Secretary General of the Democratic Left Movement, urged his allies to the presidential palace and remove president Lahoud. However, the calls remained unanswered. Years later, 14 March allies admitted that had Lahoud been removed, Lebanon would have been spared the later political assassinations. Kassir was among the first victims in the growing list of political assassinations that occurred in Lebanon from 2004 to 2008. These began with the attempted assassination of
Marwan Hamadeh and followed with the killing of Rafik Hariri in 2005. 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 12 December 2005, Samir Kassir's colleague,
An Nahar's 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. MP
Walid Eido from the Hariri-led Future movement was killed near the Military Bath of Beirut on 13 June 2007. Shortly afterwards, MP
Antoine Ghanem of the Lebanese Phalanges Party (aka
Kataeb Party), was killed in another car bomb on 19 September 2007 in the
Sin al-Fil suburb of Beirut. Then, second-in-command of the
Lebanese Armed Forces, General
François al-Hajj was killed in the military-secured suburb of Baabda on 12 December 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. ==Views==