Dahiyeh Security Plan Reaches Zero-Hour
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةA security plan set to be implemented in the capital Beirut and its southern suburbs has entered the final stages as security forces are mobilizing to deploy heavily in the area to clamp down on outlaws.
Sources told al-Mustaqbal newspaper published on Tuesday that the security plan will kick off in April and will include all the neighborhoods of Dahiyeh, including Hizbullah's strongholds.
The sources said that Hizbullah is in complete harmony with the state's plan after the increase in drug and prostitution cases busted in the area.
Media reports had said earlier this month that the party informed concerned officials that it can no longer tolerate the “repercussions of the proliferation of arms” in its stronghold, in particular after the clashes between al-Jaafar and Zoaiter families in Burj al-Barajneh and the spread of crimes “which only the state can combat.”
H.K.
G.K.
So, all the criminals have been given 6 months advance notice to find their preferred holiday destination.
"The sources said that Hizbullah is in complete harmony with the state's plan after the increase in drug and prostitution cases busted in the area."
Yea, wanna bet we'll find them in Arsal now, the only place where the army and security forces cannot enter?
"the party informed concerned officials that it can no longer tolerate the “repercussions of the proliferation of arms” in its stronghold...."
Interesting, and I wonder who was/is arming those in dahiyeh.
As a Shia follower of Khomeini I will forgive & pray for those who insult my Lords, Sayyid Hassan Nassrallah, Sheikh Sayyid Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, and President Bashar Al Assad.
I often think of you and how you are managing to post as you lay in pieces and tranquility at your final resting place dear flamethrower..... RIP Shia Hero
I like what you've done with the place Hassans, it's obvious you feel very safe and protected by the Resistance. What are those sandbags? Are they part of a new architectural style, Rococo, Romanesque or Neoclassical influenced? Is this the new Bunker chic we've been reading about in Architectural Digest?