Naharnet

Germany Bans all Hizbullah Activities on Its Soil

The German government on Thursday said it was banning all activities of Lebanon's Iran-backed Hizbullah movement in Germany, calling it a "Shiite terrorist organisation".

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer "has today banned the operation" of the group in Germany, his spokesman wrote on the ministry's Twitter account.

Raids were taking place in several places across the country, he added.

Dozens of police and special forces stormed mosques and associations linked to Hizbullah in Bremen, Berlin, Dortmund and Muenster in the early hours of the morning, German media reported.

"Even in times of crisis the rule of law is upheld," the ministry spokesman tweeted.

Although Hizbullah has no official presence in Germany, security forces believe its members use the country as a safe haven and to raise funds, including through criminal activities.

Like the European Union, Germany had until now only outlawed Hizbullah's military wing while tolerating its political wing.

The United States and Israel have long designated Hizbullah as a terrorist group and urged allies to follow suit.

Britain outlawed Hizbullah's political wing last year, making membership of the Shiite movement or inviting support for it a crime.

The decision follows outrage over the display of the Hizbullah flag, which features a Kalashnikov assault rifle, at pro-Palestinian demonstrations in London.

The mood began shifting in Germany too with the German parliament passing a resolution last December to ban the group from operating in Germany altogether.

Among other things, today's ban means the group's supporters would no longer be allowed to wave Hizbullah flags at marches in Germany.

Hizbullah, which backs Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the country's civil war, is seen by Israel as an Iranian proxy, seeking to extend the Islamic republic's military reach to the Jewish state's northern border.

Israeli warplanes have carried out hundreds of air strikes in Syria over the past few years against what Israel says are Iranian and Hizbullah targets.

Hizbullah was established in 1982 during Lebanon's civil war. It is now a major political party in the country, where it holds a majority in parliament along with its allies.

Israel and Hizbullah also fought a 2006 war.

Source: Agence France Presse, Naharnet


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