
Syrian official: Hezbollah poses a threat on our borders, in sponsoring all arms and drug smugglers
The commander of the Western Region in the Syrian Border Security Administration, Mu'ayyad al-Salama, stated that 'during the past week, clashes took place with armed smuggling groups in the Syrian villages of Hawik, Jarmash, Wadi al-Hawrani and Akum, during a combing campaign we launched to control the country's western borders from smuggling operations.'
He claimed, in statements to the Syrian News Agency – SANA, that 'most of the smuggling gangs on the Lebanese border belong to Hezbollah, which has become a threat with its presence on the Syrian border through its sponsorship of drug and weapons smugglers.'
Al-Salama pointed out that 'in turn, the former regime also transformed the Syrian-Lebanese border into corridors for drug trafficking in cooperation with Hezbollah, which helped strengthen the presence of armed smuggling gangs in the border area.'
He claimed that 'during the combing campaign, our forces were able to seize a large number of farms, warehouses, and factories for manufacturing and packaging hashish and Captagon pills, in addition to printing presses specialized in printing counterfeit currency, as this area was the economic artery of these gangs. We also seized many shipments of weapons and narcotics in the border areas with Lebanon, which were on their way to cross.'
The Syrian official added: 'We confirm that we did not target the Lebanese interior, despite the bombing that targeted our units by Hezbollah, and our operations were limited to the adjacent Syrian villages, and targeted armed smuggling gangs and those who fought with them.'
Earlier, Al-Nashra's correspondent in the Bekaa reported that the Lebanese army had deployed on the Lebanese-Syrian border from Qanafez to Dora Josi, passing through Hosh Al-Sayyed Ali, and closed all illegal roads with earthen barriers, to maintain security and prevent the entry of militants and the smuggling of weapons and drugs to and from Syria.
During the deployment, army units appeared to be establishing centers and opening new roads to control the borders.
The new military administration deployed its elements along the border on the Syrian side, where this border witnessed cautious calm today and no shooting, breach or smuggling was recorded on illegal roads due to the closure of the crossings.
Source: El Nashra , translated from Arabic
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The 961
an hour ago
- The 961
Lebanon Is Officially Renaming Hafez el Assad Avenue After Ziad Rahbani Instead
Lebanon is officially renaming Hafez el Assad Avenue in Beirut to Ziad Rahbani Avenue instead! Hafez el-Assad was Syria's previous dictator who occupied Lebanon during his rule. This move is a great step in promoting Lebanese arts and culture and honoring those who contributed to it. The decision was made during today's cabinet session.


LBCI
an hour ago
- LBCI
Hezbollah's Qassem: Lebanon's interest lies in restoring sovereignty, while Israel's interest is in weakening Lebanon
Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem ruled out accepting any new agreements with Israel, insisting that the original deal, referring to the November 27 understanding, must be implemented first. "We reject any new agreement. Any proposed timeline that falls under the shadow of Israeli aggression is unacceptable," he declared. Qassem accused Israel of reneging on its commitments and said developments in Syria have pushed Israel to reconsider its previous stance. "Israel reversed the agreement and did not abide by it. What happened in Syria greatly influenced the steps Israel took, and it now regrets formulating the agreement," he added. In response to recent statements by U.S. envoy Tom Barrack, Qassem said, "What Barrack proposed serves Israel entirely. His conditions—disarming Lebanon, the resistance, and the people—are completely in Israel's favor." He revealed that Barrack's proposal includes disarming Hezbollah within 30 days, even down to hand grenades and mortar shells, which he described as "simple weapons." He also warned of a wider conflict: "If Israel launches a broader war on Lebanon, rockets will fall upon it." Qassem emphasized that Hezbollah had facilitated the Lebanese state's responsibilities under the November 27 deal, but stressed that Lebanon's priority remains "restoring sovereignty and achieving liberation," while "Israel's interest lies in weakening Lebanon." Qassem reiterated that Lebanon's interest lies in restoring sovereignty and liberation, while Israel's interest is in weakening Lebanon. He also stressed that the issue of resistance against Israel must be decided through national consensus and that disarmament should not be tied to any timeline.


LBCI
an hour ago
- LBCI
Cabinet begins debate on exclusive state control of weapons
Lebanon's Cabinet has begun discussions on the first item on its agenda—exclusive state control over weapons—according to information obtained by LBCI.