Gulf News

Hezbollah weapons at heart of Lebanon election today

DISARMING THE GROUP HAS DOMINATED CAMPAIGNS OF THEIR OPPONENTS

- BAALBEK, LEBANON

I“This is the biggest misinforma­tion campaign. Why? Because they are implementi­ng America’s policy against the resistance weapons.”

t was a sea of yellow as thousands of men, women and children waving Hezbollah flags and wearing the group’s trademark yellow caps rallied on a giant plot of land in the ancient eastern city of Baalbek in support of the heavily armed militant group.

One after another, many attendees vowed to vote today for the Shiite Hezbollah and its allies in Lebanon’s closely watched parliament­ary elections, rejecting any attempt to disarm the powerful group.

Despite a devastatin­g economic collapse and multiple other crises gripping Lebanon — the culminatio­n of decades of corruption and mismanagem­ent — the deeply divisive issue of Hezbollah’s weapons has been at the centre of the vote for a new 128-member parliament.

Hussein Haj Hassan | Senior Hezbollah official

Dominant theme

Disarming the group has dominated political campaigns among almost all of the group’s opponents. Those include Western-backed mainstream political groups and independen­ts who played a role in nationwide protests since the start of the economic meltdown in October 2019.

“This is the biggest misinforma­tion campaign. Why? Because they are implementi­ng America’s policy against the resistance weapons,’’ senior Hezbollah official Hussein Haj Hassan told The Associated Press on Friday ahead of the rally in Baalbek.

Hezbollah was the only group officially allowed to keep its weapons after the 1975-90 civil war because it was fighting Israeli forces occupying parts of south Lebanon. In 2000, Israel withdrew from Lebanon but Hezbollah and others in the small Mediterran­ean nation insisted its weapons were necessary to defend it against Israel, which has one of the strongest armies in the region.

Chain of events

Hezbollah has since fought a monthlong war with Israel in 2006 that ended in a draw and after the start of the conflict in Syria the Iran-backed group sent thousands of fighters to fight alongside President Bashar Al Assad’s forces helping him tip the balance of power in his favour. Hezbollah’s rivals say its weapons and its backing of regional forces such as Al Assad’s and the Iran-backed Al Houthi militia in Yemen have harmed Lebanon’s relations with Gulf nations. Those nations have categorise­d the Lebanese group as a terrorist organisati­on and withheld financial support for the country.

Haj Hassan, a legislator since 1996 and a Cabinet minister three times, said claims that Hezbollah is responsibl­e for Lebanon’s collapse were “a big lie.”

 ?? AFP ?? Lebanese civil servants assigned to run polling stations carry ballot boxes in Beirut yesterday.
AFP Lebanese civil servants assigned to run polling stations carry ballot boxes in Beirut yesterday.
 ?? AP ?? Lebanese army patrol a street in Beirut ahead of parliament­ary elections today.
AP Lebanese army patrol a street in Beirut ahead of parliament­ary elections today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates