![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Fpr a December 2004 deletion debate over this page see Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Pierre Gemayel
This article is not NPOV. It is propaganda. It is directly lifted, word for word from: http://www.falangist.com/pierre.htm
The original text (not mine), which User:Morwen deleted, was a copyvio, a plagiarism of the said article. I substantially reworked the article, rewriting it in my own words, adding material from miscellaneous sources. I think my text is significantly different from the original for it not to be a copyvio.
I am open to differences of opinion on this matter, however. If no consensus can be reached, I propose that the article be deleted - in its entirety - and I will write an entirely new one. David Cannon 05:17, 25 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Made a few corrections. For example: The town's name is "Bikfaya" and not "Bifkaya". Also, it is generally believed that Syria and its allies in Lebanon were behind Bashir's assassination (just as they were behind the Hariri assassination as the current UN investigation into that issue is expected to claim soon).
Just in case someone jumps on this, it seems his son, or someone of the same name, was assassinated in Beirut today. It is NOT this man (since he died some years ago). We should start a new article.-- Daysleeper47 14:22, 21 November 2006 (UTC) Grandson.
I've deleted the reference to Gemayel having led his team at the 1936 Olympics. There was no Lebanese team, and neither is there any mention of Gemayel or Jmayel or Jemmayel or anything similar in the list of competitors. I've written a book on these Games, so I know my stuff!
I removed the word "illegal" because the Syrian presence in Lebanon WAS NOT illegal because Elias Sarkis the President of Lebanon personally requested the military intervention of Syria and Syria was given a mandate by the Arab League, which approved of Syria's role in Lebanon.
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Fpr a December 2004 deletion debate over this page see Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Pierre Gemayel
This article is not NPOV. It is propaganda. It is directly lifted, word for word from: http://www.falangist.com/pierre.htm
The original text (not mine), which User:Morwen deleted, was a copyvio, a plagiarism of the said article. I substantially reworked the article, rewriting it in my own words, adding material from miscellaneous sources. I think my text is significantly different from the original for it not to be a copyvio.
I am open to differences of opinion on this matter, however. If no consensus can be reached, I propose that the article be deleted - in its entirety - and I will write an entirely new one. David Cannon 05:17, 25 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Made a few corrections. For example: The town's name is "Bikfaya" and not "Bifkaya". Also, it is generally believed that Syria and its allies in Lebanon were behind Bashir's assassination (just as they were behind the Hariri assassination as the current UN investigation into that issue is expected to claim soon).
Just in case someone jumps on this, it seems his son, or someone of the same name, was assassinated in Beirut today. It is NOT this man (since he died some years ago). We should start a new article.-- Daysleeper47 14:22, 21 November 2006 (UTC) Grandson.
I've deleted the reference to Gemayel having led his team at the 1936 Olympics. There was no Lebanese team, and neither is there any mention of Gemayel or Jmayel or Jemmayel or anything similar in the list of competitors. I've written a book on these Games, so I know my stuff!
I removed the word "illegal" because the Syrian presence in Lebanon WAS NOT illegal because Elias Sarkis the President of Lebanon personally requested the military intervention of Syria and Syria was given a mandate by the Arab League, which approved of Syria's role in Lebanon.