Lebanon to Ask EU Not to Label Hizbullah 'Terrorist', Bulgaria Urges Consensus on Blacklisting Military Wing

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Presidency on Thursday announced that caretaker Foreign Minister Adnan Mansour has been tasked to ask the EU to refrain from putting Hizbullah on its list of terrorist organizations.

“Following consultations with the premier, it has been decided to task FM Adnan Mansour to ask Lebanon's envoy to the EU and to inform the European Commission and the union's member states that Lebanon's government wants them to refrain from putting Hizbullah, an essential component of the Lebanese society, on the list of terror groups, especially should the decision be taken in a hasty manner and without objective and decisive evidence,” the Presidency said.

Al-Arabiya television reported Wednesday that the EU is inclined to “unanimously” approve placing the party on the blacklist.

European Union foreign ministers are set to decide Monday whether or not to add the military wing of Hizbullah to its list of terrorist groups, diplomatic sources said Thursday.

A meeting of EU ambassadors on Thursday broke up with no agreement on adding the powerful group to the list as "a small number of member states" remained opposed, said an EU diplomat speaking on condition of anonymity.

"Ministers will discuss the issue on Monday," said the source, referring to scheduled talks in Brussels between the bloc's 28 foreign ministers.

Unanimity is required to add the Lebanese group to the dozen people and score of groups currently subject to an EU asset freeze -- including Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas and Colombia's FARC guerrillas.

Another diplomatic source told Agence France Presse that Ireland and Malta were holding out but that Austria appeared to have dropped objections to the push led by Britain, France and the Netherlands. The positions of the Czech Republic, which has changed government, and Slovakia were unclear.

"We are near a consensus," the source said.

Several countries have objected that it is difficult to separate Hizbullah's military and political wing. They also fear destabilizing politically fragile Lebanon as the Syrian crisis across its border deteriorates.

Concerns over Hizbullah have mounted in Europe since an attack last year on Israeli tourists in Bulgaria which Sofia blamed on the party.

On Wednesday, Bulgaria's Interior Minister Tsvetlin Yovchev said new evidence has bolstered its case implicating Hizbullah in the deadly July 2012 bus bombing, but investigators still do not know the specific identities of the suspects.

The attack in the Black Sea resort of Burgas killed five Israeli tourists, the bus driver and the alleged perpetrator.

Bulgaria Thursday commemorated the one-year anniversary of the attack and called for sanctions against Hizbullah.

At a ceremony in Burgas, Prime Minister Plamen Oresharski said the EU should "work towards a consensus decision that would allow... the military wing of Hizbullah to be added to its list of terror organizations."

"There are clear links to Hizbullah behind this attack," Bulgaria's interior minister said Thursday, citing new information from foreign intelligence services.

He pointed to "the very professional preparation and execution of this terrorist act."

Despite recovering fingerprints and DNA from the bomber -- who also died in the attack -- Bulgaria has been struggling to identify the culprits.

A re-enactment of the attack showed the bomber either died by mistake or his device was detonated at a distance.

"We do not have enough evidence to accuse a specific person of a specific crime," Burgas regional prosecutor Kalina Chapkanov told BNT public television Thursday.

The June deadline for the investigation has been extended by five months by prosecutors who said that written testimony by Israeli survivors was only received earlier this month.

In February, an official Bulgarian report said investigators had "well-grounded reasons" to suggest that two men suspected in the attack belonged to the militant wing of Hizbullah.

In March, a Cyprus court sentenced a self-confessed Hizbullah member to four years behind bars for planning attacks there.

Hizbullah has been on a U.S. terror black list since 1995.

Britain and the Netherlands are the only EU nations to have placed Hizbullah on their own lists of terrorist groups.

Comments 22
Thumb Roaring-FlameThrower 18 July 2013, 19:39

Oh, Just got home and read this refreshing news:) Bless our Presidency and our government for tasking precious Mansour with this task which he will gladly undertake. The EU will list HA (Hells Angels) on the terror list, no doubt. Rest assured this cheap action will not lessen the Islamic Secular Resistance's resolve in defending us from internal and external dangers. If protecting one's country, its borders in Homs, Aleppo, and Damascus is considered terrorism, then so be it. If "stabbing" and shooting a "peaceful" demonstrator supporting the Takfiris is considered terrorism, so be it. If intimidating a whole nation, dealing in drugs, and establishing a duty-free zone in Dahiyeh is considered terrorism, so be it. If killing and murdering and silencing your opposition is considered terrorism, so be it. Enough is enough... Anyway, Europe as far as "We" are concerned does not exist, as our brother Walid Moallem said. tfeh....

Thumb Bandoul 18 July 2013, 20:58

@RFT, I am willing to bet the EU will never place HA on the EU international terrorist list for fear of retribution by HA on their respective soil. I am afraid they do not have the stomach, stamina, resolve or courage to face the consequences of such an action.

Thumb benzona 19 July 2013, 00:12

Bandoul, tu as raison. Who cares about labeling a military wing? They should put names on these labels, aka Nasrallah, Qassem, and their terrorist militiamen.

Their has to be bounties on their heads, like ayman zawahiri, Ben laden, etc.... It'll encourage people to disclose their locations so they can be captured and taken to the Hague for the Hariri trial among many other crimes they committed in recent years.

Missing beirutbastard00 19 July 2013, 04:00

Benzona what you are doing is dangerous.

Thumb Roaring-FlameThrower 18 July 2013, 20:00

SHN? .... Sick Hilarious Nobody:)

Thumb Elemental 18 July 2013, 20:11

Actually Lebpatriot, you're wrong. Unlike you I check records, and like I've mentioned before, they're originally Iranian. Little over 35 to 40 years ago they came to the south from Iran, began taking our dialect and then taking our family names, on top of paying women to cover up with the hijab, and those women who didn't had acid thrown in their faces, seen the end results myself. I've spoken with some who had Christian last names and asked, where was your grandfather and great grandfather from? They froze, and admitted the names were given to them and in fact had no roots in Lebanon whatsoever.

Thumb Elemental 18 July 2013, 22:05

@Bandoul, you missed the point unfortunately. It's obvious there are Lebanese Shia's, but I'm referring to HA's origins. See the ones I spoke about burnt with acid? They were regular Lebanese Shia who refused Iranian pressure and were punished for it.

Thumb benzona 19 July 2013, 00:14

Plenty of Shiites came from Iran and Iraq in the 80s .... They settled here. Of course we have common DNA codes, but the fact is they are immigrants....

Missing beirutbastard00 19 July 2013, 04:02

But the Israelis were here for 3000 years yea? Lol

Missing michel_tannous 18 July 2013, 20:30

Hezballah and most of the shiite "lebanese" are iraqis and iranians. Melhem zain, the so called lebanese singer even admitted to being iraqi (from najaf i believe). Its a pity that syria and lebanon had shiite tribes and families from iran and iraq settling areas belonging to muslims and christians.

Thumb Bandoul 18 July 2013, 21:57

@michel_tannous, it is difficult to accept that with the invention of the Internet and the easy access to vast amounts of knowledge that you would make such statements. Studies show that Shia DNA is most common with Phoenician DNA and furthermore studies show that high percentage of Shia in Lebanon and Syria were converted from Christianity to Islam as a result of Islamic conquests. There is copious data from respected historians that support this. Please take the time to check out these studies. Knowledge is power :)

Thumb Elemental 18 July 2013, 22:09

copy/paste.

Missing michel_tannous 18 July 2013, 22:36

Not at all bandoul. Studies show that about 30 % of the ENTIRE lebanese population has SOME, not purely 100%, phoenician blood in them (also found in other arabs and african people). In other words, some lebanese have some phoenician blood in them. Thats all. Lebanese are a minority among "lebanese shia". Its true, some shiites and muslims used to be christian, and before that pagans and before that god knows what but thats irrelevent to the whole picture as most so called lebanese shiites are recent settlers history-wise. Besides, i dont consider that one must have phoenician blood to be lebanese but at least one should have been in lebanon for more than four generations and not have been brought here to settle for political reasons as ottomans used to relocate people within its empire to keep the peace between feuding tribes and families. And certainly not to have been brought here for the wilayat al faqih iranian project as iran did.

Missing beirutbastard00 19 July 2013, 04:07

Recent genetic testing has shown that nearly 40% of Lebanese Shi'a belong to the Y-DNA haplogroup J2. The J2 haplogroup is found at its highest frequency in the Fertile Crescent and Mediterranean regions, and has been considered the Y-haplogroup most characteristic of the Phoenicians.[9]

Lebanese Shi'a are said to have been among the original inhabitants of the Keserwan and Jbeil regions in the Mount Lebanon District, and it is also known that some Shi'a Lebanese come from Christian and Pagan origins

(Wikipedia)

Missing zahle_night 18 July 2013, 20:31

Well, if they act like terrorists, kill like terrorists, terrorize like terrorists, one MUST call them terrorists… What else would you call them??
They had been implicated in so many car-bombs that killed dozen of the Lebanese politicians. Their members are on the run from justice, and they don’t believe in any court not even the International one... I meant what else would you call them… “The Angels of Ali”….

Missing zahle_night 18 July 2013, 20:54

Yeap, that is lebpatriot2 for you... I hope to God you look like the picture you post.. Otherwise, I would have eaten my heart for nothing...

Thumb Elemental 18 July 2013, 21:42

Spoken like a true Revolutionary guard member ;)

Missing zahle_night 18 July 2013, 21:09

I love you too lebpatriot2!!

Missing samiam 18 July 2013, 21:59

let's not forget, he is not doing this for lebanon but rather his syrian masters.

Thumb phoenician 19 July 2013, 00:33

Lebpatriot
What an idiot you are Sir.

Missing beirutbastard00 19 July 2013, 04:12

I'm glad you added "sir" to that... Seems some ppl here don't get that :/

Missing beirutbastard00 19 July 2013, 04:10

Lol