Lebanese politicians file lawsuit against Hezbollah chief for ‘inciting war’

Special Lebanese politicians file lawsuit against Hezbollah chief for ‘inciting war’
Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem delivers a statement during a ceremony in honor of deceased Shiite cleric Abbas Ali Al-Moussawi in Beirut’s southern suburbs on August 25, 2025. (AFP)
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Lebanese politicians file lawsuit against Hezbollah chief for ‘inciting war’

Lebanese politicians file lawsuit against Hezbollah chief for ‘inciting war’
  • Plaintiffs accuse Naim Qassem of violating constitution in major public address
  • Protests by Hezbollah supporters prompt US envoy to cut short southern border tour

BEIRUT: A group of prominent Lebanese politicians on Wednesday filed a criminal lawsuit against Hezbollah chief Sheikh Naim Qassem, accusing him of inciting war and sedition.

The plaintiffs include current and former MPs as well as senior political figures in the country.

The suit is the first of its kind to target a member of Hezbollah’s senior leadership. It cites inflammatory speeches by Qassem, the party’s secretary-general, and accuses him of “inciting war, sedition and the overthrow of constitutional authority.”

MP Ashraf Rifi told Arab News that the lawsuit, which was accepted by the court, targets “anyone the investigation reveals to be a perpetrator, accomplice or instigator.”

He added: “We are aware that Sheikh Qassem’s address is unknown, making it difficult to serve him the legal notice. While the lawsuit may not deter him from continuing his actions, we assert that he has violated the constitution, and the complaints will continue as long as Hezbollah continues to do so.” 

Alongside Rifi, MPs Elias Khoury, Camille Chamoun (head of the National Liberal Party), George Okais, former MP Eddy Abillama and the head of the Change Movement, lawyer Elie Mahfoud, are acting as plaintiffs against Qassem. The lawsuit was submitted before Public Prosecutor Jamal Hajjar at the Palace of Justice in Beirut, amid tight security measures taken by the Lebanese Army.

The plaintiffs said that their personal claim against Qassem followed the Public Prosecution’s “inaction regarding the individual in question.”

They called for “the appointment of the appropriate authority to investigate the complaint, summon Sheikh Naim Qassem for questioning, and take all necessary legal measures against him.”

In the suit, the plaintiffs highlighted comments made by Qassem during a major public address to Hezbollah supporters in mid-August.

Hezbollah represents an “unlicensed organization considered a terrorist organization by a large number of countries around the world,” they said.

During the speech earlier this month, Qassem had repeated Hezbollah’s refusal to surrender its weapons to the state in defiance of a Cabinet decision.

The plaintiffs described Qassem’s speech as “a threat to Lebanon’s internal security and a direct challenge to decisions issued by the Council of Ministers.”

Qassem threatened the Lebanese Army with his comments, and displayed open contempt for the presidency, prime minister and members of the government, they said.

The Hezbollah chief also defied government measures by calling for demonstrations across the country, including outside the US Embassy in Beirut, the plaintiffs added.

“This speech provoked most of the Lebanese who are still living through a bloody war provoked by the military organization headed by the accused person,” the suit said.

The plaintiffs said Qassem’s behavior implicated him in Israel’s occupation of Lebanese regions and the widespread economic damage inflicted on the country as a result of the war.

Qassem’s speech contradicted President Joseph Aoun’s inaugural address to parliament, in which he outlined the general framework of Lebanon’s policy — particularly the principle that only legitimate Lebanese forces may possess arms, the plaintiffs added.

The speech also contradicted a ministerial statement highlighting Lebanon’s commitment to non-involvement in regional or international conflicts, they said.

The secretary-general’s speech was “a clear and explicit admission that the military organization led by Qassem is waging war on behalf of a foreign state and in its defense, a policy that will inevitably lead to devastation and destruction,” the suit said.

Hezbollah’s stance under Qassem contradicts the Lebanese Constitution and the UN Charter that the Lebanese Republic is committed to, the plaintiffs said.

“The Israeli enemy responded to the speech with a direct and public warning to Lebanon against any escalation by the military organization led by Qassem. The speech also triggered a massive wave of reactions, all of which were sectarian in nature; some rejecting and denouncing the statement, while others responded with sectarian counter-comments in support of what the defendant had said,” they added.

The lawsuit highlighted Hezbollah’s call to protest that accompanied the speech, involving the display of threatening banners on public property along the road to Rafic Hariri International Airport in Beirut. Some banners featured images of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and bore the message: “The hand that reaches for our weapons, we will cut it off. At your command, we are ready and advancing toward Jerusalem.”

The MPs accused Qassem of inciting “sedition and internal strife, overthrowing decisions taken by legitimate constitutional authorities, disrupting Lebanon’s relations with the vast majority of world countries that support the Lebanese government’s decisions regarding the restriction of arms to the Lebanese state, and exposing the Lebanese to hostile acts by an enemy state, Israel.”

Rifi described the government’s decision to restrict arms to the state as a pivotal moment in Lebanon’s political history, leading to the flourishing of sovereignty.

The MP told Arab News he is convinced that “surrendering weapons will happen sooner or later. People do not want to live under the rule of a state within a state. Hezbollah’s role is over.”

Hezbollah’s power and influence within Lebanon had grown substantially over the past decade, in part due to support from Damascus and Tehran. But the fall of the Assad regime in Syria in late 2024 and the election of Lebanon’s newest government earlier this year has led to a dramatic shift in the balance of power.

The party’s military wing was significantly weakened during its latest war with Israel. Key officials were killed, including former chief Hassan Nasrallah, and a substantial portion of its arsenal was destroyed.

Rifi said the party and its military wing “has nothing to do with the defense strategy” of Lebanon.

“It is the state’s responsibility; it is not that of those who seek to be part of the strategy placement according to their whims and desires. It is the responsibility of the Lebanese Army officers and leadership,” he added.

The MP accused Hezbollah of trying to model itself on Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces in order to “legitimize itself as a partner.”

He added: “This will not happen. Hezbollah’s role is over. The role of Iran in the region is over. Assad has been ousted and could now be subject to accountability.”

Wednesday’s lawsuit was filed amid escalating political tensions in Lebanon. Hezbollah has insisted on maintaining control of its arms, while the Lebanese government has tasked the army with developing a plan to limit weapons to the military and government-affiliated security forces.

The plan must be discussed and adopted by the Council of Ministers on Sept. 2 and implemented by the end of the year.

US envoy Tom Barrack, during a press conference at the Presidential Palace on Tuesday, set a condition that requires Hezbollah to surrender its arms.

Hezbollah supporters reacted by forcing Barrack to cancel his tour of Lebanon’s southern border region the following day. They staged protests, held banners condemning the tour and “biased policies,” and prepared tomato pallets to throw at Barrack’s convoy. The envoy was scheduled to visit the village of Khiam and Tyre.

He had arrived at Francois Al-Hajj Army Barracks in Marjayoun aboard a helicopter. The Lebanese Army deployed a heavy presence in the area, including at the northern entrance of Khiam, to accompany Barrack.

However, residents in Khiam gathered at the town’s entrance holding images of slain family members, along with Hezbollah banners, causing the visit to be canceled.


Israel army launches operation in West Bank’s Nablus

Israel army launches operation in West Bank’s Nablus
Updated 18 sec ago

Israel army launches operation in West Bank’s Nablus

Israel army launches operation in West Bank’s Nablus
NABLUS, West Bank: Dozens of Israeli soldiers stormed the occupied West Bank city of Nablus on Wednesday, witnesses and Palestinian officials said, with the Red Crescent reporting at least seven people wounded in the raid.
Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military confirmed that its forces were conducting an operation in the northern West Bank city, without specifying its purpose.
The raid began at around 3:00 am (0000 GMT), residents said, with soldiers in armored vehicles storming several neighborhoods of Nablus’s old city, which has a population of around 30,000 people.
It came a day after Israeli forces carried out a relatively rare raid on Ramallah, seat of the Palestinian Authority, targeting a currency exchange in the city center and leaving dozens of Palestinians wounded, according to the Palestine Red Crescent Society.
Nablus Governor Ghassan Daghlas told AFP that Wednesday’s “assault... is merely a show of force with no justification.”
One witness, who declined to give his name, reported that soldiers had expelled an elderly couple from their home.
Israeli troops “are storming and searching houses and shops inside the old city, while some houses have been turned into military posts,” said Ghassan Hamdan, head of the Palestinian Medical Relief organization in Nablus.
AFP footage showed Israeli forces and military vehicles deployed on the streets, with some troops taking position on a rooftop.
Daghlas said the army had informed Palestinian authorities that the raid would last until 4:00 pm.
Local sources said clashes broke out at the eastern entrance to the old city, where young people threw stones at Israeli soldiers, who responded with tear gas and live ammunition.
The Red Crescent said its teams treated five people wounded by rubber bullets, one person hit by live bullet shrapnel and another following “physical assault.”
One more person was injured in a “fall” during the raid, the medical organization added, and at least 27 others suffered from tear gas inhalation.
Palestinian presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeineh, in a statement carried by official news agency Wafa, slammed “the Israeli escalation in cities and refugee camps,” calling a recent uptick in raids “dangerous, condemned and unacceptable.”
The old city of Nablus has been the focus of several major Israeli raids, including in 2022 and 2023 during large-scale operations targeting a local grouping of armed fighters, as well as in 2002 during the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising.
In early June 2025, an Israeli military operation there resulted in two Palestinians killed.
Since the start of the Gaza war in October 2023, violence has surged in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967.
Israeli troops or settlers in the West Bank have killed at least 972 Palestinians, including militants and civilians, since the beginning of the Gaza war, according to an AFP tally based on Palestinian Authority figures.
In the same period, at least 36 Israelis, both civilians and security forces, have been killed in attacks or during military operations in the territory, according to Israeli figures.

’Time for EU to act’ on Gaza: humanitarian chief

’Time for EU to act’ on Gaza: humanitarian chief
Updated 40 sec ago

’Time for EU to act’ on Gaza: humanitarian chief

’Time for EU to act’ on Gaza: humanitarian chief
  • Hadja Lahbib says it’s time for the EU to find a collective voice on Gaza
  • EU foreign ministers meet in Denmark this week to discuss proposal to suspend funding to Israeli start-ups

BRUSSELS: The EU’s humanitarian chief Hadja Lahbib on Wednesday urged the bloc to take tougher action over the war in Gaza as divisions among member states stall moves to punish Israel.
“We are at a turning point and now it’s time for the EU to act in a way that matches its international stature,” Lahbib, European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, told journalists.
“Now it’s time for the EU to find a collective voice on Gaza.”
Splits within the 27-nation bloc between countries backing Israel and those favoring the Palestinians have seen the EU often left hamstrung in the face of the dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
“We cannot stand by and simply watch innocent civilians, aid workers, journalists being killed and starving to death,” Lahbib said.
“Saving lives takes the political courage to find a strong voice that reflects our values and principles.”
EU foreign ministers meeting in Denmark this week will discuss a proposal to suspend funding to Israeli start-ups as punishment for the situation in Gaza.
But the bloc has so far failed to garner the majority needed to take that step — let alone move ahead with more forceful measures against Israel.
The EU’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas announced a deal in July with Israel to increase the flow of aid into Gaza but so far it has not met expectations.
Lahbib said that the situation had improved “very, very partially” but that the aid getting into the territory remained a “drop in the ocean.”
The United Nations declared a famine in Gaza on Friday, blaming the “systematic obstruction” of aid by Israel during its nearly two-year war with the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
“My role is to denounce and to say loudly what is happening there. This is a tragedy,” Lahbib said.
“We will be judged by history and by our grandchildren. That’s for sure.”
The war was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Out of 251 hostages seized during the attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 62,819 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.


Syria condemns Israeli strike that killed six soldiers

Security forces in Damascus earlier this year. (File/SANA)
Security forces in Damascus earlier this year. (File/SANA)
Updated 27 August 2025

Syria condemns Israeli strike that killed six soldiers

Security forces in Damascus earlier this year. (File/SANA)
  • Foreign ministry says attack was a 'clear violation' of the country’s sovereignty
  • The attack hit a military building near Kisweh, outside Damascus on Tuesday

DAMASCUS: Syria on Wednesday condemned an Israeli drone strike that killed six soldiers the previous day, calling it a “clear violation” of the country’s sovereignty.
Israel has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria since an opposition alliance toppled longtime ruler Bashar Assad in December.
It has also opened talks with the interim authorities in Damascus.
In a statement, Syria’s foreign ministry called the strike “a gross violation of international law and the United Nations Charter.”
It added that the attack represented “a clear breach of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic.”
State television reported six army personnel “were killed in strikes by Israeli occupation drones” near Kisweh, outside Damascus in the Tuesday attack.
A defense ministry official had previously told AFP on condition of anonymity that an Israeli drone targeted “one of the military buildings of the 44th Division.”
The Israeli military did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
Earlier Tuesday, state news agency SANA reported that “a young man was killed in an Israeli strike on a home in the village of Taranja,” on the formerly Syria-controlled side of the armistice line on the Golan Heights.
Since Assad’s overthrow, Israel has occupied much of a UN-patrolled demilitarised zone on the formerly Syria-controlled side of the armistice line.


Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official
Updated 27 August 2025

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official

Nine dead as floods sweep northern Sudan: official
  • Flash floods have killed nine people in Sudan, a civil defense official told AFP on Wednesday, after heavy seasonal rains triggered flooding and flattened homes in the Nile Valley

PORT SUDAN: Flash floods have killed nine people in Sudan, a civil defense official told AFP on Wednesday, after heavy seasonal rains triggered flooding and flattened homes in the Nile Valley.
The official said the deaths occurred when a torrential downpour struck the northern city of Al-Dammer, the capital of River Nile State, on Tuesday, with the floodwaters surrounding five neighborhoods and impeding access.
The rains also submerged parts of the main road between Atbara in northeastern Sudan and the capital Khartoum, about 300 kilometers (186 miles) to the south, cutting off traffic.
Sudan’s rainy season reaches its height in August, typically affecting the south and southeast of the country. But in recent years, rainfall has increasingly reached into the desert regions to the north, and as far as the border with Egypt.
In the eastern state of Gedaref, authorities also reported roughly 600 homes were damaged in the rains and more than 8,500 acres of farmland left underwater.
Emergency officials in the state warned villages had been left isolated by the floods with key roads severed, particularly in the towns of Gallabat and Qala Al-Nahl.
The area contains some of Sudan’s most important agricultural zones, producing staples such as sorghum, sesame and groundnuts.
Sudan’s meteorological authority issued an orange-level warning on Tuesday for Khartoum as well as the neighboring River Nile and White Nile states.
It cited a “high risk” of further heavy rain, strong winds and thunderstorms likely to cause rapid water surges and flooding.
Sudan has been struck by flooding amid a devastating war between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), now in its third year.
The conflict, which erupted in April 2023, has killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and ravaged vital infrastructure — creating what the United Nations calls the world’s largest displacement and hunger crisis.


Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar
Updated 27 August 2025

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar

Turkish police seize jewels and antiques worth $30M in raid at Istanbul’s historic Grand Bazaar
  • Turkish media report police in Istanbul have seized jewels and antiques worth an estimated $30 million from businesses in the city’s historic Grand Bazaar during an investigation into smuggled diamond
  • The operation was launched after 10 suspects were initially detained for smuggling gems into Turkiye, broadcaster CNN Turk and other outlets reported Wednesday

ISTANBUL: Police in Istanbul have seized jewels and antiques worth an estimated $30 million from businesses in the city’s historic Grand Bazaar during an investigation into smuggled diamonds, Turkish media reported Wednesday.
The operation was launched after 10 suspects were initially detained for smuggling gems into Turkiye, broadcaster CNN Turk and other outlets reported.
Acting on orders from the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, police raided 23 businesses in the 15th-century covered marketplace, arresting a further 40 people.
Police confiscated some 135 pieces of jewelry, 1,132 ingots of precious metals and 267 historical artifacts with a value of 1.25 billion Turkish liras ($30.5 million), according to reports. Firearms and digital material were also seized.
The Grand Bazaar is one of the world’s most visited tourist sites and hosts thousands of small shops. It was established by Sultan Mehmet II shortly after he conquered the city from the Byzantine Empire.
Frequently described by tour guides as the world’s first shopping mall, the Grand Bazaar is no stranger to the attentions of law enforcement. In April, investigators raided a company dealing in foreign currency and precious metals over money-laundering claims.