hariri - Future resumed broadcasting.jpg


After an initial technical glitch in which no sound was heard for a few minutes after 1330 GMT, the backdrop of a Lebanese flag was shown and a news broadcaster said:

"They wanted us without a voice and now we come back loudly ... we said we would come back and we did."

Lebanon has a variety of TV stations allied to rival domestic political factions. Future TV is viewed as the mouthpiece of the ruling majority backed government which has been under attack the opposition for the past 18 months

The buildings housing some of the station's studios were set on fire / destroyed by pro-Syrian gunmen during Hezbollah's rapid takeover of the Muslim half of Beirut last week before they later handed positions over to the army.

Hezbollah, backed by Syria and Iran, and its opposition allies have routed loyalists of the Sunni-led government in Beirut and hills to the east in fighting that has pushed Lebanon to the edge of civil war.

Future TV and its sister news channels Al Sharq and other stations went back on air from alternative studios based in the Christian Sin el-Fil neighborhood in time for a scheduled news conference by its owner, Sunni magnate Hariri ( pictured) , the parliamentary majority leader who heads the pro-government Future movement.

"They simply are demanding that we surrender, they want Beirut to raise white flags ... This is impossible," a defiant Hariri told the news conference.

Station chief Nadim Munla earlier said the station had received threats since the violence erupted if it continued broadcasting.

"The slogan that was raised last week was weapons, we today ... say the pen is mightier than the sword," he said.

At least 81 people have been killed in the violence which erupted after Prime Minister Fouad Siniora outlawed Hezbollah's illegal communication network and fired Beirut's airport security chief who is a Shiite himself and , who was accused of collaborating with Hezbollah in spying on Lebanon's airport runway no. 17 which is used by jets of foreign dignitaries and Lebanese politicians -- a move Hezbollah saw as a declaration of war.

Future's newspaper, also off newsstands since last week on Hezbollah's orders, will resume publication on Wednesday.

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Tags: Hariri, Hezbollah, Iran, Lebanon, mustaqbal, source: Reuters, Syria, Ya Libnan