Lebanon Summons German Ambassador Over Hezbollah Ban

BEIRUT (Reuters) —
germany hezbollah
German special police near the El-Irschad center in Berlin, after Germany banned Iran-backed Hezbollah on its soil and designated it a terrorist organization. (Reuters/Hannibal Hanschke)

Lebanon’s foreign minister summoned the German ambassador on Tuesday to explain Berlin’s decision last week to ban Hezbollah on its soil.

Germany also classified the Iranian-backed group as terrorist, a step which Israel has long urged along with the United States.

Foreign Minister Nassif Hitti affirmed that “Hezbollah is a main political component in Lebanon which represents a wide section of the people and part of parliament,” his office said on Tuesday.

Hitti called in Germany’s ambassador after the leader of Hezbollah, a major backer of the government, accused Germany on Monday of bowing to U.S. pressure.

Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah denounced police raids on mosque groups in Germany suspected of being close to the heavily armed Hezbollah, which he said had no official presence in Europe.

Nasrallah also said Lebanon’s government was responsible for protecting its citizens in Germany.

Iran has condemned Germany’s move, while Israel has urged other European Union countries to take similar action.

The EU classifies Hezbollah’s military wing as a terrorist group, but not its political wing. Britain introduced legislation in February of last year, before it left the EU, that designated Hezbollah as a terrorist organization.

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