Feted with petals, Hezbollah brings Iranian fuel into Lebanon
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[September 16, 2021]
By Issam Abdallah
AL-AIN, Lebanon (Reuters) -Hezbollah began
bringing Iranian fuel into Lebanon via Syria on Thursday, a move the
Shi'ite Muslim group says should ease a crippling energy crisis but
which opponents say risks provoking U.S. sanctions.
Dozens of truck carrying Iranian fuel oil entered northeastern Lebanon
near the village of al-Ain, where Hezbollah's yellow flag fluttered from
lampposts.
"Thank you Iran. Thank you Assad's Syria," declared a banner, referring
to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
The trucks sounded their horns as they passed through al-Ain. Some
onlookers waved Hezbollah's flag, while a woman and boy threw petals at
one vehicle.
The Iran-backed Hezbollah has said the ship carrying the fuel docked in
Syria on Sunday after being told going to Lebanon could risk sanctions.
Washington has reiterated that U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil sales
remain in place. But it has not said whether it is considering taking
any action over the move by Hezbollah, which it designates a terrorist
group.
The Lebanese government has said its permission was not sought to import
the fuel. A security source said the tanker trucks passed through an
unofficial border crossing.
The move marks an expansion of Hezbollah's role in Lebanon, where
critics have long accused the heavily armed group of acting as a state
within the state.
Founded by Iran's Revolutionary Guards in 1982, Hezbollah has long been
part of Lebanon's governing system, with ministers and members of
parliament.
It has fought numerous wars with Israel, and its fighters have helped
Assad in the Syrian war.
Hezbollah has said it will donate fuel oil to institutions in need
including government hospitals and orphanages and sell it at "an
appropriate price" to others including private hospitals, medical
storage facilities and flour mills.
BREAKING 'THE AMERICAN SIEGE'
The energy crisis is a result of a financial meltdown since 2019,
sinking the currency by some 90% and sending more than three quarters of
the population into poverty.
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Hezbollah flags flutter as a convoy of tanker trucks carrying
Iranian fuel oil arrive at al-Ain village in northeastern Lebanon,
September 16, 2021. REUTERS/Aziz Taher
Fuel supplies have dried up because Lebanon does not
have enough hard currency to cover even vital imports, forcing
essential services including some hospitals to scale back or shut
down and sparking numerous security incidents.
Hezbollah declared it had broken an "American siege".
Lebanon's financial system unravelled as a result of decades of
profligate spending by a state riddled with corruption and waste,
and the unsustainable way it was financed.
The French ambassador rebuked the former prime minister in July for
saying Lebanon was under siege, saying the crisis was the result of
years of mismanagement and inaction by Lebanon.
Western governments and donor institutions have said they will
unlock aid once Lebanon enacts reforms.
The United States, a big supplier of humanitarian and military aid
to Lebanon, is backing a plan to ease the energy crisis using
Egyptian natural gas piped via Jordan and Syria. The U.S. ambassador
has said Lebanon does not need Iranian fuel.
Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has said a second ship with
fuel oil will arrive in the Syrian port of Baniyas in a few days,
with a third and fourth, respectively carrying gasoline and fuel
oil, also due.
A new government aims to resume talks with the IMF to tackle the
crisis.
(Additional reporting by Tom Perry; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong, Toby Chopra and Andrew Cawthorne)
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