'HIZBULLAH'S DIGGING ITS OWN GRAVE'
By Brenda Gazzar
Jerusalem Post
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12 10668639076&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
May 15 2008
Hizbullah is "digging its own grave" by having turned its weapons
against its own people in recent days, a Lebanese parliamentarian
told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday.
"I think Hizbullah proved that... it's not a resistance [group],"
said Yeghia Djeredjian of the Social-Democrat Hunchag party, an
Armenian political party.
"It's not a political party. It's only a terrorist organization."
An Arab League delegation arrived in Beirut on Wednesday in an
emergency effort to defuse the crisis, which has killed at least 82
people across the country within the last week and has stoked fears
in the Mideast of a broader regional confrontation.
On Wednesday, Lebanon's US-backed cabinet canceled two measured it
took against Hizbullah last week that sparked fighting in which the
Shi'ite Islamist group briefly took over parts of the Lebanese capital.
A Lebanese minister said the Cabinet has reversed measures against
Hizbullah that triggered the worst violence since the country's
15-year civil war.
Hizbullah demanded that the government reverse decisions to sack an
airport security chief for alleged ties to the Shi'ite group and to
declare the militants' private telephone network illegal.
Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah said the moves amounted to a
declaration of war and shortly after, he unleashed his fighters on
the streets of Beirut.
The clashes left 54 dead.
Information Minister Ghazi Aridi said the Cabinet revoked the decisions
"in view of the higher national interest."
Seconds after his announcement, celebratory gunfire erupted south of
Beirut, a Hizbullah stronghold.
Prior to the decision, Djeredjian strongly criticized its prospects,
saying it would be better for Prime Minister Fuad Saniora's government
to resign rather than cancel the measures against Hizbullah.
No government, he said, should make any decision "under the power
of guns."
A second politician, however, said that revoking the decision to fire
Beirut's airport security chief - who allegedly has ties to Hizbullah
- and outlawing the Islamic group's communications network would be
the right thing to do if the government received guarantees by all
parties and the Arab world that security could be preserved.
In addition, Hizbullah and its allies must refrain from "paralyzing the
country" through its civil disobedience campaign, the politician said.
But if such guarantees can't be made, he added, "that will make the
crisis very dangerous."
The politician warned that the Iranian-backed Hizbullah must set aside
its arms and engage in dialogue with the other Lebanese parties before
the crisis deteriorated into another civil war.
"I think it's completely amazing that the resistance against Israel
that we support all together is using their arms against us,"
he said. "I don't know why they are saying that we are part of the
Israeli program, that we are being bought by the US... We don't have
arms. We just want a strong army. When you are talking about the
state and the government, it has to be for all Lebanon."
Djeredjian argued there was no reason for any group other than the
state to carry weapons unless there was an attack on the country.
"If Israel or any country attacks Lebanon, I am the first person to
carry a gun against that country," he said. "If there is no attack on
Lebanon, there is no reason to keep any gun outside the government's
powers."
By Brenda Gazzar
Jerusalem Post
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=12 10668639076&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowF ull
May 15 2008
Hizbullah is "digging its own grave" by having turned its weapons
against its own people in recent days, a Lebanese parliamentarian
told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday.
"I think Hizbullah proved that... it's not a resistance [group],"
said Yeghia Djeredjian of the Social-Democrat Hunchag party, an
Armenian political party.
"It's not a political party. It's only a terrorist organization."
An Arab League delegation arrived in Beirut on Wednesday in an
emergency effort to defuse the crisis, which has killed at least 82
people across the country within the last week and has stoked fears
in the Mideast of a broader regional confrontation.
On Wednesday, Lebanon's US-backed cabinet canceled two measured it
took against Hizbullah last week that sparked fighting in which the
Shi'ite Islamist group briefly took over parts of the Lebanese capital.
A Lebanese minister said the Cabinet has reversed measures against
Hizbullah that triggered the worst violence since the country's
15-year civil war.
Hizbullah demanded that the government reverse decisions to sack an
airport security chief for alleged ties to the Shi'ite group and to
declare the militants' private telephone network illegal.
Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah said the moves amounted to a
declaration of war and shortly after, he unleashed his fighters on
the streets of Beirut.
The clashes left 54 dead.
Information Minister Ghazi Aridi said the Cabinet revoked the decisions
"in view of the higher national interest."
Seconds after his announcement, celebratory gunfire erupted south of
Beirut, a Hizbullah stronghold.
Prior to the decision, Djeredjian strongly criticized its prospects,
saying it would be better for Prime Minister Fuad Saniora's government
to resign rather than cancel the measures against Hizbullah.
No government, he said, should make any decision "under the power
of guns."
A second politician, however, said that revoking the decision to fire
Beirut's airport security chief - who allegedly has ties to Hizbullah
- and outlawing the Islamic group's communications network would be
the right thing to do if the government received guarantees by all
parties and the Arab world that security could be preserved.
In addition, Hizbullah and its allies must refrain from "paralyzing the
country" through its civil disobedience campaign, the politician said.
But if such guarantees can't be made, he added, "that will make the
crisis very dangerous."
The politician warned that the Iranian-backed Hizbullah must set aside
its arms and engage in dialogue with the other Lebanese parties before
the crisis deteriorated into another civil war.
"I think it's completely amazing that the resistance against Israel
that we support all together is using their arms against us,"
he said. "I don't know why they are saying that we are part of the
Israeli program, that we are being bought by the US... We don't have
arms. We just want a strong army. When you are talking about the
state and the government, it has to be for all Lebanon."
Djeredjian argued there was no reason for any group other than the
state to carry weapons unless there was an attack on the country.
"If Israel or any country attacks Lebanon, I am the first person to
carry a gun against that country," he said. "If there is no attack on
Lebanon, there is no reason to keep any gun outside the government's
powers."