Newsflash

image

 Sayyed warns supporters not to bet on Obama

BEIRUT: Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said Tuesday that it was crucial for Lebanon's 2009 legislative elections to be held "on time." "Not holding the elections or postponing them would be very dangerous," Nasrallah said in a speech to mark Martyrs Day that was broadcast via video link to a gathering of resistance supporters in Beirut's southern suburbs.

It would be in the interests of all parties, he argued, to hold free and fair elections "without obstruction or postponement."

Nasrallah also stressed the need to lower the voting age from 21 to 18 and called on MPs to adopt a constitutional amendment for that purpose.

He also reiterated his loyalty to his allies in the opposition, vowing that "recent reconciliations or meetings do not breach this firm commitment."

Nasrallah said reconciliation efforts were "welcomed and we have our hand extended to all."

"Reconciliations are a national interest, all groups are interested in having a calm political situation," he added. 

Concerning broadcasts on Syrian television last week of confessions by alleged Fatah al-Islam militants for a deadly September bombing in Damascus, Nasrallah called for "a serious and transparent investigation."

In the broadcast, the suspects said that Fatah al-Islam, an Al-Qaeda-linked group which battled the Lebanese Army last year at the Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp, had links to Parliamentary majority leader MP Saad Hariri's Future Movement. Nasrallah and Hariri met for their own reconciliation session in late October.

"We support Lebanese-Syrian security coordination and we are sincere in our calls that justice be removed from politics," he added.
 

He also thanked Lebanese Army intelligence for last month's arrest of a cell that collaborated with Israel. "I hope the day comes when evidence shows that Israel is involved in the bombings and assassinations that happened in Lebanon," he said.

Nasrallah stressed that equipping the army was "a priority," adding that discussions of a national defense strategy should be completed "soon."

"Despite disagreements ... all groups agree that the Lebanese Army should have an integral role in defending Lebanon," he said, adding that it was "a pity" that a proposal by his ally, Free Patriotic Movement leader and MP Michel Aoun, to integrate Hizbullah with the military, had not been well received.

He also called for the number of participants in the dialogue to be expanded "so we can face burdens together and transform the dialogue table into a true forum for discussion."

The sayyed also cautioned his supporters against expecting a change in US foreign policy with the election of President-elect Barack Obama.

"Our Arab world, our Third World and our African world can empathize with Obama because of his past or the color of his skin, but politics and interests are a different story," he said. "Don't exaggerate hopes nor give people high expectations so that no one is disappointed or makes miscalculations," he added. "I don't want to anticipate events, but logic dictates that we not bet on changes in injustice or believe that he will be more lenient or less unfair than his predecessor."

Nasrallah also paid tribute to fallen resistance fighters "with great pride," thanking them for their "efforts and struggle."

The Daily Star, with AFP

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow 3 IOF SOldiers Killed, 5 others injured
3 IOF SOldiers Killed, 5 others injured PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 17 April 2008

The Israeli army officially acknowledged that the Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, managed during a "masterly ambush" Wednesday to kill three Israeli Givati brigade soldiers and to cause serious- to-moderate injuries among five others in the area of Juhor Ad-Dik in the central Gaza Strip.

Earlier Israeli sources told the Ma'an news agency that Palestinian fighters managed to infiltrate into a nearby vantage point near the Kibbutz Be'eri military post, three miles off central Gaza, from which they opened fire at eight Israeli soldiers. Two soldiers died of their wounds a short time later and a third was proclaimed dead some two hours later at the Beer Sheba's Soroka medical center.

Sources affiliated with the Qassam Brigades affirmed that its fighters opened fire extensively at a special Israeli force at Juhor Ad-Dik.

Palestinian eyewitnesses told the PIC reporter that two helicopters landed and transported the dead and wounded soldiers, while F-16 warplanes flew over the area.

In the same context, the Qassam Brigades published the details of the heroic operation carried out by its fighters east of the Zeitoun neighborhood specifically in the Juhor Ad-Dik area.

In a communiqué received by the PIC, Abu Obeida, the spokesman for the Brigades, explained that the ambush consisted of eight fighters in two groups, a group was in the front line and the other took a back position, where the first group lured the Israeli soldiers of the special force into the liberated lands towards the north to find themselves caught in a pincer.

Abu Obeida elaborated that when the second group of the Qassam fighters opened fire at the infiltrating Israeli occupation soldiers, they tried to flee southwards where the first group was waiting for them.

The spokesman added that the Qassam fighters fired three RPGs at the Israeli special force,  while the Qassam artillery unit participated in the operation and fired dozens of mortar shells to block Israeli backup and the air defence unit drove off for some time the Israel helicopters. 

The communiqué pointed out that the Qassam fighters heard clearly the Israeli soldiers crying and screaming as they were withdrawing safely from the scene without giving any Israeli soldier a chance to fire one shot at them.

The communiqué underlined that there are four options laid before any Israeli soldier entering Gaza, which are, either to fall dead, to be a prisoner, to have a permanent disability, or to go back having a mental disease, because none would return victorious in any way. 

* Source: Palestine Information Center

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 June 2008 )
 

News Feed


Press TV
PRESS TV RSS News
Solana wants Obama to talk to Iran
EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana has said he hopes the Obama administration will engage in nuclear negotiations with Tehran.
Tehran's Esteqlal loses to Foulad 1-0
A first-half goal by Sajjad Feizollahi has helped his side Foulad of Khuzestan to snatch a 1-0 away victory over Esteqlal of Tehran.
China hotel blaze kills 8, injures 16
Eight people have been killed and another 16 injured after a fire broke out in a hotel in northeastern China, according to media reports.
Aubry voted France's Socialists leader
Martine Aubry, who gave France the 35-hour work week, has beaten Segolene Royal to win the leadership of the French Socialist party.
Fresh 'US strike' kills 4 in Pakistan
Another strike by suspected US drones has killed four militants and injured 16 others in Pakistan's troubled northwestern tribal area.
BBC News Feed
BBC News | Middle East | World Edition
Iraqis protest against troop deal
Supporters of Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr stage protests in Baghdad against a deal to allow US troops to remain in Iraq.
Security increase in tense Hebron
Israel increases security in the West Bank city of Hebron ahead of a Jewish pilgrimage there by an expected 20,000 people.
Shoot-out in north Lebanon city
One person is killed and three are wounded in a shoot-out in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, security forces say.
Security draws Iraqi doctors home
Improved security in Iraq has led to 800 doctors returning so far this year, a senior health ministry official says.
Iraq leader defends US troop deal
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki defends a deal on the presence of US forces in Iraq, saying it preserves Iraqi sovereignty.

Who's Online

© 2008 Media Review | Website Designed and Optimised by Go Fish Client Catchers