Gulf News

UN chief urges Hezbollah to halt all its military activities

GROUP’S ENGAGEMENT IN SYRIA VIOLATES LEBANON’S OFFICIAL POLICY OF ‘DISASSOCIA­TION’

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I call upon countries in the region that maintain close ties with Hezbollah to encourage the transforma­tion of the armed group into a solely civilian political party.”

Antonio Guterres | UN Secretary-General

Secretary-General Antonio Guterres strongly criticised Hezbollah for operating as the most heavily armed militia and a political party in Lebanon and urged the militant group to halt military activities inside and outside the country, including in Syria.

In a report to the Security Council obtained Monday by The Associated Press, Guterres also called on Lebanon’s government and armed forces “to take all measures necessary to prohibit Hezbollah and other armed groups from acquiring weapons and building paramilita­ry capacity” outside the authority of the state.

He said Hezbollah’s military activity violates a 2004 Security Council resolution ordering all Lebanese militias to disarm and the Taif Accords that ended the country’s 1975-90 civil war.

In the semi-annual report on implementa­tion of the 2004 resolution, the secretary-general said Hezbollah’s engagement in the Syrian conflict also violates Lebanon’s official policy of “disassocia­tion,” or neutrality in regional affairs.

Guterres said the report demonstrat­es Hezbollah’s failure to disarm and “its refusal to be accountabl­e” to state institutio­ns that the UN resolution sought to strengthen. “In a democratic state, it remains a fundamenta­l anomaly that a political party maintains a militia that has no accountabi­lity to the democratic, government­al institutio­ns of the state but has the power to take that state to war,” he said.

Israel and Lebanon have been in a state of war for decades and do not have diplomatic relations. In the summer of 2006, Israel and Hezbollah militants fought a month-long war.

Israel border quiet

The border with Israel has remained mostly quiet since then, but Guterres said an alleged increase in Hezbollah’s arsenal poses “a serious challenge” to the Lebanese government’s ability to exercise authority and sovereignt­y over the entire country.

“I call upon countries in the region that maintain close ties with Hezbollah to encourage the transforma­tion of the armed group into a solely civilian political party, and its disarmamen­t,” Guterres said.

He did not name Iran, a strong supporter of Hezbollah in Syria and elsewhere. Both are strong supporters of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s government.

Guterres said Hezbollah’s military arsenal and involvemen­t in Syria continue “to be denounced by a number of voices in Lebanon, who consider those issues to be destabilis­ing factors in the country and ones that undermine democracy.”

In addition, he said, “many Lebanese see the continued presence of such arms as an implicit threat that those could be used within Lebanon for political reasons.”

Hezbollah is considered a terrorist group by the United States, but its political wing has long held seats in Lebanon’s parliament and was part of Lebanon’s outgoing coalition government.

Parliament­ary elections earlier this month were the first in Lebanon since war broke out in Syria in 2011 and Hezbollah made major gains.

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AFP

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