The National - News

Hezbollah will go to great lengths to protect the power it has managed to win

- LIZZIE PORTER

“Dear Nasrallah, all of them means all of them, and you before all of them.” So read a placard held by a woman from Hezbollah’s stronghold in Beirut’s southern suburbs – a nod to protesters’ demands that Lebanon’s entire political class should step down. The mass demonstrat­ions that have swept through Lebanon for the past fortnight have targeted the ruling elite with widespread criticism – including Hezbollah. Like all of Lebanon’s traditiona­l political parties, it has seen rarely voiced dissent from within its traditiona­l support base. Researcher­s say a taboo has been broken in Shiite communitie­s, which now feel able to criticise their leaders.

Lebanon’s dismal economy and US sanctions – part of Washington’s maximum-pressure campaign on Iran and its proxies – have affected Hezbollah’s ability to provide jobs and community services, which had won it loyalty historical­ly. And with 13 seats in parliament and three Cabinet positions, the party has not been spared accusation­s of corruption aimed at Lebanon’s entire political elite.

Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, at first appeared to support the demonstrat­ions, saying they “surpassed sects, doctrines, regions and political orientatio­ns”. His party was not taking part only because doing so risked turning the popular movement into “a political conflict”, he reasoned.

Yet as criticisms of Hezbollah and its allies grew, media affiliated to the party began to portray demonstrat­ions as foreign-funded. Supporters instigated violence against protesters trying to change Lebanon’s sectarian-based political status quo, from which the party benefits. Last Tuesday, men loyal to Hezbollah and its Shiite ally, the Amal Movement, attacked peaceful protesters in central Beirut. The same day, Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned, although he remains in a caretaker capacity as talks over a replacemen­t continue.

In a speech on Friday – his third since protests began nearly three weeks ago – Nasrallah said Hezbollah is “not at all worried or scared” about its future. He appeared keen to present himself as a protector of Lebanon’s best interests and as a keeper of peace.

Nasrallah also denied that the previous cabinet – or any before that – was a “Hezbollah government”, but he emphasised the need for a swift government formation. That is probably because the party had been enjoying more power within the Lebanese establishm­ent than ever before.

Among the three government department­s it controls is the health ministry. Its allies and significan­t cabinet presence have helped it to be at once both a non-state paramilita­ry and a state entity with power in government.

There is a parallel of the current state of Lebanon in Iraq, where demonstrat­ors have denounced Iran-backed political parties and paramilita­ries. Crucially, this is happening in Shiite-majority cities in southern Iraq, from where groups aligned with Tehran have recruited fighters and developed support bases.

In Baghdad, protesters beat a poster showing powerful Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps commander Qassem Suleimani, who runs Iranian operations in Iraq; his face was crossed out with a large red X. In an indication of his power in Baghdad, the commander has met Iraqi officials several times since protests began.

In response to the demonstrat­ions, Abu Mahdi Al Muhandis, an Iraqi adviser to Mr Suleimani, said his forces were “ready, with the same care with which we confronted ISIS, to stand against this sedition”, claiming that the protests’ intent was to “destroy Iraq”.

Back in Lebanon, the current juncture is a challenge to Hezbollah. But it will weather this. The past two weeks of protests do not spell its downfall, nor the end of many people in Lebanon supporting – or at least tolerating – its existence. There are still enough people like those watching Nasrallah speak via televised links in Beirut’s southern suburbs last Friday who say they want reform but are not sure about wholesale change.

Beyond those core supporters who attend its events and rallies, Hezbollah still has support for its anti-Israel stance. Even among protesters – many of whom openly dislike Hezbollah – the militant group’s disarmamen­t is not one of the main concerns. When I interviewe­d her earlier this year, caretaker interior minister Raya El Hassan – from Mr Hariri’s political bloc, traditiona­lly opposed to Hezbollah – said Hezbollah represente­d part of the Lebanese population: “I’m part of the cabinet and I have to deal with my colleagues,” she said in a resigned tone.

Hezbollah plays the long game. It disapprove­s of critical voices from within Shiite communitie­s complainin­g about corruption and poor services. It will take measures to silence them. One outspoken critic of the party told me attempts to protest in Beirut’s southern suburbs “had been suppressed” and that 10 demonstrat­ors had been detained by the army in areas of south Lebanon where Hezbollah wields significan­t power.

But the group’s bigger concern is threats to its military might – its weapons arsenal – and its political sway. This is one reason behind its insistence on the quick formation of a new government using the existing system. It is willing to go to great lengths to defend the power and influence it has won over more than three decades in Lebanon. This has enabled it to expand to Syria, Iraq and Yemen, where it sends fighters and senior commanders in training and strategy roles. Analysts warn of conflict in Lebanon if Hezbollah feels so threatened that it uses more force to quell protesters’ demands for change.

Hezbollah is being challenged by calls for an end to the political system in which it has won legitimacy. But for the moment, it isn’t clear that there are enough people in Lebanon who are willing to jump into the unknown of a new, non-sectarian system. It is not clear that others could provide the services upon which the current political elites – including Hezbollah – have built loyalty. Without viable alternativ­es who have the financial and political power to challenge it, the group will live on.

Like the rest of the political elite, the militia is being challenged but will not give up its hold on Lebanon easily

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates