A group loyal to al-Qaida has said the top Hizbullah official reportedly killed earlier this month had actually died in Beirut blasts in November that targeted the Iranian embassy.
In an online recording, an Abdullah Azzam brigades leader also warned the group would stage new operations against Hizbullah in Lebanon, in revenge for the party's support for Syria's President Bashar Assad.
"We announce to the Sunnis in the Levant and in general, and in Lebanon in particular, that Hizbullah military commander Hassan Hollo al-Laqqis was not assassinated by the Jews (Israel)... God himself killed him, through the two martyrs in their attack on the Iranian embassy," Sheikh Sirajeddin Zureikat said.
The recording was posted on the radical cleric's YouTube account late on Thursday and redistributed on jihadist forums.
He was referring to a twin suicide attack on November 19 that targeted the Iranian embassy in the southern suburbs of Beirut, a stronghold of Hizbullah.
On December 4, Hizbullah said Laqqis was killed near Beirut. The party blamed Israel for the assassination.
The online video does not show Zureikat's face. Instead, it shows the pictures of the two men who carried out the suicide attacks that killed 25 people.
Beneath their pictures, in which they are shown wearing military gear, runs a caption reading: "The martyr Abu Oweiss al-Sidawi (Moein Abu Dahr) God welcome him."
A second caption reads: "The martyr Abu Sufyan al-Shami (Adnan al-Mohammad) God welcome him."
Immediately after the attack on the Iranian embassy, the Abdullah Azzam brigades had claimed responsibility for the blasts.
In the latest recording, Zureikat meanwhile said the attacks were in revenge for "Iran's crimes" in Syria against Sunnis, as well as for Hizbullah's "crimes".
The Abdallah Azzam brigades leader meanwhile warned of new attacks against Hizbullah in the country.
"Our operations will come to an end in Lebanon only if two conditions are fulfilled: first, Hizbullah must withdraw its troops from Syria... and secondly Sunni youths must be freed from Lebanon's oppressive jails," Zureikat said.
Dozens of Sunni fighters are being held in jails since the 2007 battle in Nahr al-Bared, northern Lebanon, that pitted the army against radical Islamists.
Others have also since been arrested in the southern city of Sidon, where a June battle pitted the army against Islamists that killed 18 troops.
Referring to al-Qaida's chief, Zureikat meanwhile said: "We emphasize that we do not target Shiite civilians, in keeping with orders from... Sheikh Ayman al-Zawahiri... and that our target is Iran's Hizbullah and its allies in the battle against our Sunni brothers in Lebanon and Syria."
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