
Won't disarm until Israel leaves southern Lebanon, says Hezbollah chief
'We cannot be asked to soften our stance or lay down arms while [Israeli] aggression continues,' Naim Qassem told thousands of supporters gathered in Beirut's southern suburbs on Sunday for Ashura, an important day in the Shia Muslim calendar.
Ashura commemorates the 680 AD Battle of Karbala, in which Prophet Muhammad's grandson, Imam Hussein, was killed after he refused to pledge allegiance to the Umayyad caliphate. For Shia Muslims, the day symbolises resistance against tyranny and injustice.
The Beirut area, a Hezbollah stronghold, was draped in yellow banners and echoed with chants of resistance as Qassem delivered his speech, flanked by portraits of his predecessor, Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed by Israel in September last year.
Israel launched a wide-scale assault on Lebanon on October 8, 2023 – a day after Palestinian group Hamas, which counts Hezbollah as an ally, stormed the Israeli territory, killing some 1,100 people and taking about 250 others captive.
The Hamas attack was immediately followed by Israel's bombing of the Gaza Strip, which has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children.
Israel's simultaneous attack on Lebanon escalated into a full-scale war by September 2024, killing more than 4,000 people, including much of Hezbollah's top leadership, and displacing nearly 1.4 million, according to official data. A United States-brokered ceasefire nominally ended the war in November.
However, since the ceasefire, Israel has continued to occupy five strategic border points in southern Lebanon and has carried out near-daily air strikes that it says aim to prevent Hezbollah from rebuilding its capabilities. Those strikes have killed some 250 people and wounded 600 others since November, according to Lebanon's Ministry of Health.
'How can you expect us not to stand firm while the Israeli enemy continues its aggression, continues to occupy the five points, and continues to enter our territories and kill?' Qassem said in his video address.
'We will not be a part of legitimising the occupation in Lebanon and the region. We will not accept normalisation,' he added, in an apparent response to Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar saying his government was 'interested' in such a move.
Qassem said Hezbollah's weapons would not be on the negotiating table unless Israel 'withdraws from the occupied territories, stops its aggression, releases the prisoners, and reconstruction begins'. 'Only then,' he said, 'will we be ready for the second stage, which is to discuss national security and defence strategy.' (Agencies)
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