17-05-2024 06:45 AM Jerusalem Timing

UK Calls to Add Hezbollah’s Resistance to EU’s Terror Watch List

UK Calls to Add Hezbollah’s Resistance to EU’s Terror Watch List

British, Dutch foreign ministers urge EU nations Friday to impose sanctions on the military wing of Hezbollah for providing support to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague listens to Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal (R) at the EU Council headquarters in Brussels; Dec. 1, 2011. (REUTERS) British, Dutch foreign ministers urge EU nations Friday to impose sanctions on the military wing of Hezbollah for providing support to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad.

The European Union has long resisted pressure from the Zionist entity and the U.S. to list Hezbollah, with many member states saying it was important to keep lines of contact open to a powerful organization in the Lebanese politics.

"It is necessary to move on that. I think we've taken action on that in the U.K. and I would like to see the EU designate and sanction the military wing of Hezbollah," UK Foreign Minister William Hague said on his way into an EU foreign ministers meeting in Cyprus.

Archive: a festival organized by Hezbollah in Beirut, shows the popular suuport for the partyDutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal said the European Union should brand Hezbollah a terrorist organization, a move that would enable the bloc to freeze the group's assets in Europe.

"We have for quite some time now argued that effective European measures should be taken against Hezbollah," Rosenthal said on the sidelines of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Cyprus to discuss the EU's response to the Syrian crisis.

The U.K. lists Hezbollah's military wing as a terrorist group. The Netherlands, like the U.S., lists the group but doesn't distinguish between its military and political wings, despite the party of occupation Resistance is a member of the Lebanese government.

European Union flagBut other EU member states, which have blacklisted the Palestinian Islamic group Hamas, have resisted U.S. and Zionist pressure to do the same to Hezbollah.

The Hezbollah issue has long divided European capitals. When the George W. Bush administration pushed Europe to list Hezbollah in 2005, a number of countries, led by France, opposed it. The issue hasn't been seriously addressed since then.

Several EU countries have argued that such a move could destabilize the balance of power in Lebanon and add to tensions in the Middle East.

Some European diplomats say it would also be legally difficult to blacklist Hezbollah without a court ruling in an EU state that linked the group to terrorism.

The Zionist ship Saar destroyed by the Hezbollah military wing during the July 2006 war on Lebanon while it was bombing the civilian residential areas of Beirut"Until now the Europeans have said that to designate a group as a terrorist organisation you have to have a judicial process under way against this organisation, which is not the case at the present time," said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.

Hezbollah, the Lebanese party of resistance, was set up in 1982 to fight Zionist forces which had invaded Lebanon. If it weren’t for the military wing of Hezbollah, the Lebanese land wouldn’t be liberated in May 2000, and Lebanon wouldn’t gain victory in July 2006 war which the Zionist entity launched against it.