Document #1342494
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Information on the Eid family in Tripoli is
scarce.
The following information was provided
during a 18 July 1996 telephone interview with a sociologist at the
Lebanese University in Beirut.
The source stated that the Eid family in
Tripoli is Alawi. Although their power is not based on the
traditional Zu'ama system (patronage), the Eid family has been
growing in importance and power since 1975. One of the family
members was elected to the Lebanese parliament in 1992.
The source stated that there are families
in Tripoli more powerful than the Eid such as the Karame, the
al-Jesr, the al-Hadad, the Kabarah, the Miskawi and the
al-Haseth.
The following information was provided
during a 19 July 1996 telephone interview with the Director of the
Department of Political Studies and Public Administration at the
American University of Beirut.
The Eid family is Alawi. The family is
currently an economic and political power, affiliated to Syria. The
Eid family are mainly merchants with economic interests in real
estate. A member of the family, Ali, is a member of parliament. Ali
Eid has been affiliated with an organization called the Arab Red
Knights. Although the group still exists, it is no longer active.
The Arab Red Knights were mainly active as an organization in the
1970s. The group is based in Tripoli, and does not exert
significant influence today in the rest of Lebanon.
The Monde Arabe Maghreb-Machrek reports
that Ali Eid, who run for the Arab Democratic Party, received 60,
078 votes in the 1992 elections (1993, 82). The same source
indicates that Ali Eid is Alawi (ibid.).
In its October 1992 issue, The Lebanon
Report provides the following information on Ali Eid:
Alawite from Tripoli, Ali Eid was appointed
to the newly-established Alawite seat in 1991. He studied chemistry
and political science at the American University of Beirut (AUB)
and at the University of San Jose in the U.S. He founded the
Alawite Youth Movement in 1972 and was appointed General Secretary
of the Arab Democratic Party in 1985. He also headed the pro-Syrian
Arab Knights militia (5).
For general information on the Arab
Democratic Party and its militia, the Red Knights, please refer to
Response to Information Request LBN4021 and the attached
documents.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This Response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Director, Department of Political
Studies and Public Administration, American University of Beirut
(AUB). 19 July 1996. Telephone interview.
The Lebanon Report (Beirut). October
1992. Vol. 3 , No. 10. «Members of the 1992
Parliament.»
Monde Arabe Maghreb-Machrek.
January-March 1993. Joseph Bahout. « Liban: les
élections législatives de l'été 1992.
» No. 139, p. 82.
Professor, Department of Sociology,
Lebanese University, Beirut. 18 July 1996. Telephone interview.
Monde Arabe Maghreb-Machrek.
January-March 1993. Joseph Bahout. « Liban: les
élections législatives de l'été 1992.
» No. 139.
Political Handbook of the World:
1994-1995. 1995. Edited by Arthur S. Banks. Binghamton, NY: CSA
Publications.
Political Parties of the World. 1988.
3rd ed. Edited by Alan J. Day. Chicago: St. James Press.
Revolutionary and Dissident Movements:
An International Guide. 1991. 3rd ed. London: Longman Group UK.