TODAY’S PAPER | September 28, 2025 | EPAPER

Hezbollah refuses to be disarmed

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AFP September 28, 2025 1 min read
Qassem said that he will choose the head of the Hezbollah very soon. PHOTO: REUTERS

BEIRUT:

Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said the group would not allow itself to be disarmed on Saturday as he addressed supporters marking one year since the killing by Israel of his predecessor Hassan Nasrallah.

The charismatic leader was killed in an Israeli air strike on the southern suburbs of Beirut on September 27, 2024.

"We will never abandon our weapons, nor will we relinquish them," Qassem told the tens of thousands of supporters gathered at the tomb of the former chief on Saturday.

"We are ready for martyrdom," he added.

Waving the group's yellow banner as well as Lebanese, Palestinian and Iranian flags, Hezbollah supporters gathered at the mausoleum, near Beirut airport, chanting "death to America, death to Israel" while partisan and religious songs blared from loudspeakers, an AFP journalist reported.

Iranian security chief Ali Larijani was in attendance. Tehran is a key supporter of Hezbollah.

Hezbollah is commemorating the killings of Nasrallah and second-in-command Hashem Safieddine in a series of events which began on Thursday with the projection of their images onto the iconic Raouche rock in Beirut, despite government opposition and the party's lack of official authorisation.

That opposition in turn drew criticism of the government from Hezbollah supporters.

In a statement on Saturday, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun expressed his hope that "this painful anniversary will serve as a rallying point, reinforcing the belief that Lebanon's salvation lies in having one unified state, one army and constitutional institutions that protect sovereignty and uphold dignity".

Despite a November ceasefire that ended over a year of hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel, the latter has kept up regular strikes on Lebanon and still has troops positioned at five border points inside Lebanon.

Hezbollah is under intense pressure to hand over its weapons, with the Lebanese army having drawn up a plan to disarm it, beginning in the south.

Lebanon itself is under pressure from the United States and ongoing Israeli strikes.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised Lebanon's efforts towards disarming Hezbollah from the United Nations General Assembly on Friday, but said he needed "more than words".

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