The National - News

ON ASHURA, NASRALLAH ADMITS TO FIGHTER LOSSES

Hizbollah says large turnout at Ashura celebratio­ns is proof the group had not lost support as a result of its participat­ion in Syria’s civil war

- DAVID ENDERS

Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said his group had suffered “a lot of sacrifices” in the Syrian war as hundreds of thousands of Lebanese Shiites gathered yesterday across the country to mark Ashura.

The largest celebratio­n was held in Beirut’s Hizbollah-controlled southern suburbs and although Lebanese television station Al Manar reported that Mr Nasrallah had attended the ceremony in person, he addressed the crowd by video feed.

Security for the event was heavy, with the Lebanese military closing roads to the neighbourh­oods where the celebratio­ns were held and Hizbollah personnel providing security within that cordon. Beirut’s predominan­tly Shiite southern suburbs – known locally as Dahiyeh – have previously been the target of attacks by Sunni extremists.

In 2014 and 2015, militants detonated car bombs in Dahiyeh, killing dozens in attacks that were viewed as retributio­n for Hizbollah’s military interventi­on on behalf of the Syrian government in that country’s civil war.

Ashura, which falls on the 10th day of the Islamic month of Muharram, marks the death of Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Mohammed, near the city of Karbala in Iraq in 680AD. It is a day of mourning for Shiites, but also a potent political symbol.

In Lebanon and elsewhere in the region, Shiite communitie­s link the death of Imam Hussein at the hands of a Sunni caliph to present-day oppression of Shiites. A Hizbollah spokeswoma­n said the large turnout was proof the group had not lost support as a result of its participat­ion in Syria’s civil war.

Hizbollah first began fighting openly on behalf of Bashar Al Assad in 2013, exacerbati­ng sectarian and political tensions in Lebanon and causing some analysts to suggest the group might alienate its base of support by turning its focus away from its traditiona­l role of fighting Israel.

“It proves that people who claimed the support of Hizbollah had weakened were wrong,” the spokeswoma­n said.

Many of those in attendance held pictures of Hizbollah fighters who have died in Syria. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict, estimates that as of March of this year, the group had lost at least 1,400 fighters.

Hizbollah’s political fortunes have changed since 2013 as the rebellion against Mr Al Assad became more radicalise­d, allowing Hizbollah to characteri­se them as takfiris – literally, “excommunic­ators” – who consider Shiites apostates.

The idea that Hizbollah was battling an existentia­l threat to Shiites rather than intervenin­g to save Mr Al Assad gained further currency in 2014 when fighters from ISIL and groups affiliated with Al Qaeda began threatenin­g cities and towns in northern Lebanon and briefly captured the city of Arsal.

A few months ago, Hizbollah and the Lebanese army drove the last fighters from those groups out of northern Lebanon, even forcing some of Hizbollah’s staunchest political enemies in Lebanon to praise the group. Mr Nasrallah addressed Syria’s war and ISIL in his speech on Saturday.

“ISIL is incapable of regaining territory. The group is trying to exhaust the Syrian army in order to delay its end,” Mr Nasrallah said. “However, this plan is ineffectiv­e because the decision to wipe out ISIL has been taken. Yes, there are a lot of sacrifices, but this is the nature of the battle.”

Although ISIL has suffered heavy losses in recent months, the Syrian Observator­y said yesterday that Hizbollah had lost at least 20 more fighters in eastern Syria since Thursday during battles against ISIL. It also reported that ISIL had managed to regain small pieces of territory in different parts of Syria as it launched counteratt­acks against the Syrian government and its allies.

On Saturday, Mr Nasrallah reiterated his group’s commitment to defeating ISIL.

“Battles against ISIL wherever it exists must continue until eradicatin­g the takfiri group,” Mr Nasrallah said.

He also took aim at Hizbollah’s more traditiona­l enemies

 ??  ?? As Hassan Nasrallah, Hizbollah’s leader, gave a speech by video, left, Lebanese Shiite women hold pictures of relatives lost in fighting against ISIL in Syria
As Hassan Nasrallah, Hizbollah’s leader, gave a speech by video, left, Lebanese Shiite women hold pictures of relatives lost in fighting against ISIL in Syria
 ?? Reuters; AFP ??
Reuters; AFP

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