Lebanese PM resigns amid Hezbollah tensions
BEIRUT: Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri (pic) resigned from his post during a trip to Saudi Arabia in a surprise move that plunged the country into uncertainty amid heightened regional tensions.
In a televised address from Riyadh, Hariri fired a vicious tirade against Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah group for what he said was their meddling in Arab affairs and said “Iran’s arms in the region will be cut off ”.
“The evil that Iran spreads in the region will backfire on it,” Hariri said, accusing Teheran of spreading chaos, strife and destruction throughout the region.
Hariri was appointed prime minister in late 2016 and headed a 30-member national unity Cabinet that included the Syiah militant Hezbollah. The government has largely succeeded in protecting the country from the effects of the civil war in neighbouring Syria.
The country is sharply divided along a camp loyal to Saudi Arabia, headed by the Sunni Muslim Hariri, and a camp loyal to Iran represent- ed by Hezbollah.
Hariri’s resignation yesterday was expected to sharply raise tensions in the country. In his speech, he suggested he feared for his life and said the atmosphere in the country is similar to the one that existed before his father, the late prime minister Rafik Hariri, was assassinated in 2005.
Several Hezbollah members are being tried in absentia for the killing by a UN-backed tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. Hezbollah denies any involvement. He said Hezbollah’s policies have put Lebanon “in the eye of the storm”.
“Hezbollah was able in past decades to impose a status quo in Lebanon through its weapons directed at the chests of Syrians and Lebanese,” he said.
Earlier this week, Saudi State Minister for Gulf Affairs Thamer al- Sabhan sharply criticised Hezbollah, calling for its “toppling” and promising “astonishing developments” in the coming days during an interview with the Lebanese TV station MTV.