All these great Lebanese Christian Arab leaders, that Palestinian / Muslim animals killed because of their religion. Just another example of the "tolerance" of Islam:
Assassinations in Lebanon: A History (1970s to the Present)
March 16, 1977: Kamal Jumblatt, 60, leader of Lebanon’s Druze community, a member of the Lebanese Parliament and a Socialist-nationalist supporter of Palestinians, is assassinated by the Syrian Social Nationalist Party — which Jumblatt had legalized as interior minister some years earlier. Jumblatt was also the founder of the Progressive Socialist Party. He is succeeded by his son, Walid.
June 13, 1978: Tony Frangieh, 36, the son of former Lebanese President Suleiman Frangieh, a Christian Maronite, is assassinated at his home in Ehden, in northern-Lebanon, along with his 2-year-old daughter, his wife, and 32 supporters, in the course of a long battle with the Christian Phalangist militia of Bashir Gemayel, a rival.
The 1980s
March 9, 1980, Salim Lawzi, editor of the London-based Arabic weekly Al Hawadess (the events) is found dead in Beirut. Unidentified gunmen had kidnapped him and his wife two weeks earlier as he drove to Beirut airport. The gunmen had released Lawzi's wife.
July 23, 1980, Riyad Taha, 53, a publisher and for 13 years the president of the Lebanese Publishers' Association, is machinegunned to death with his chauffeur in front of Beirut's Hotel Continental after a chase through the city. The assailants get away. The assassination is never investigated. Taha was a critic of Syrian occupation.
September 14, 1982: Lebanese President-elect Bashir Gemayel, 34, is assassinated when a bomb demolishes the building housing his Phalangist Party headquarters, where he had been meeting with staff.
November 22, 1989: Lebanese President René Moawad, 64, in office just 17 days, is assassinated as his car is blasted by a bomb on his return from Independence Day ceremonies in West Beirut. Twenty-three other people are killed. Moawad, a Maronite Christian, had sought to establish a unity government to end the Lebanese civil war, then in its 14th year.
The 1990s
October 21, 1990: Dany Chamoun, 56, a Maronite Christian and the son of former Lebanese President Camille Chamoun, is assassinated at his home in East Beirut by gunmen posing as Lebanese army soldiers. His wife and two sons are also murdered. Chamoun had been an ally of Gen. Michel Aoun, the renegade army general who’d opposed the Syrian-backed Government of President Elias Hrawi. Chamoun was also a rival to Samir Geagea, a ruthless Christian militia who, in a war ruinous to the Christian community, unsuccessfully fought Aoun for military leadership of Lebanon’s Christians.
The 2000s
February 14, 2005: Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, 60, is assassinated as a 1,000-pound truck bomb explodes while Hariri’s convoy travels near the St. George Hotel on Beirut’s seafront. Hariri, a Sunni Muslim formerly accommodating of Syria, had become a staunch critic of Syria’s occupation of Lebanon. His assassination triggers massive rallies in opposition to the occupation. The so-called Cedar Revolution leads to the withdrawal of Syrian troops that spring, after a 29-year occupation.
June 2, 2005: Samir Kassir, 45, influential Christian author, columnist and relentless critic of Syria at the leading Lebanese Arabic-language daily Al-Nahar, is assassinated when a bomb under the seat of his Alfa Romeo explodes as he stepped into his car in Christian East Beirut. His father was Lebanese-Palestinian, his mother was Syrian.
December 12, 2005: Gebran Tueni, 48, a Christian member of Parliament and publisher of the Lebanese Arabic-language daily Al-Nahar, is killed by a remote-controlled car bomb. Al Nahar is a critic of Syria. Two security workers are also killed. Tueni had fled Lebanon the previous August in fear for his life but had recently returned.
June 21, 2006: Pierre Gemayel, 34, a Lebanese cabinet minister and opponent of Syrian influence in Lebanon, is gunned down in his car. Gemayel was the son of former Lebanese president Amin Gemayel (whose brother, Bashir, was assassinated in 1982, days before becoming president), and the grandson of Pierre Gemayel, founder of the right-wing Christian Phalangist — or Kataeb — Party.
September 19, 2007: Antoine Ghanem, 64, a Christian member of Parliament and a member of the anti-Syrian March 14 coalition, is assassinated by a car bomb as he drove through Sin al-Fil, a Christian suburb of Beirut. His bodyguard is also killed. Ghanem was a member of the Christian Phalange Party. Ghanem had fled Lebanon in fear for his life, returning just two days before the assassination.
December 12, 2007: Brig. Gen. François al-Hajj, 54, is assassinated by a 77-pound car bomb that explodes as he drove by, on his way to work at the Defense Ministry. Al-Hajj had been one of the commander of the battle of Nahr el-Bared, when the Lebanese army defeated a militant Palestinian cell. Al-Hajj was to succeed Gen. Michel Suleiman, the army chief who became Lebanon’s president in 2008.