BEIRUT—Gunmen assassinated a senior Hezbollah commander outside his home Wednesday in southern Beirut, a major breach of the Shiite militant group’s security as it struggles to maintain multiple fronts while it fights alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces in Syria.
The overnight killing
of Hassan al-Laqis, described as a founding member of the group and one
of its top commanders, was a huge blow to the Iranian-backed group that
dominates power in Lebanon.
Hezbollah’s
heavy-handed and very open involvement in the civil war next door has
enraged the overwhelmingly Sunni rebels seeking to oust Assad, and those
sectarian divisions have spilled over into Lebanon and exposed the
group and its Shiite supporters to retaliatory attacks.
Hezbollah strongholds
have been the target of deadly car bomb attacks and suicide bombers
attacked the Iranian Embassy in Beirut last month, killing 23 people.
The militant group quickly blamed its main enemy Israel for the assassination. Israeli officials denied any involvement.
Al-Laqis’ killing came
shortly after Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah ended a
three-hour interview with a local television station, in which he
accused Saudi Arabia of being behind the Iranian Embassy bombings. He
indirectly blamed an alliance between Iran’s rivals Israel and Saudi
Arabia for trying to strike at the group.
The group announced
his death Hezbollah in a statement, saying al-Laqis was killed as he
returned home from work around midnight.
“The brother martyr
Hassan al-Laqis spent his youth and all his life in this honourable
resistance since its inception up until the last moments of his life,”
the statement said.
An official close to Hezbollah said al-Laqis held some of the group’s most sensitive portfolios and was close to Nasrallah.
A Lebanese security
official and the official close to Hezbollah said al-Laqis was shot with
a pistol equipped with a silencer at close range after he parked his
car in the ground floor garage of his apartment building in the Hadath
neighbourhood, just southwest of Beirut.
He was struck by five
bullets in the head and neck, the Lebanese official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity in line with regulations. Al-Laqis was rushed to a
nearby hospital but died early Wednesday from his wounds, officials
said.
The parking lot was
stained with muddied footprints that led to a small olive grove nearby.
Yellow police tape blocked off the area and Hezbollah investigators were
at the scene.
“I was trying to
sleep, and I heard ... a bullet being fired and a dog barking,” said
Abdullah, a local resident who wished to be identified only with his
first name for security reasons. “I did not bother myself, but later I
heard people screaming. I had a look and found it was crowded, and then
our neighbours told us that one of the neighbours was assassinated,”
Abdullah said.
The killing and other
attacks underscored how the Shiite militia has found itself mired into
fronts: Shoring up Assad’s rule in Syria, and against the Jewish state.
Hezbollah’s fight in Syria marked a strategic shift for the fiercely
anti-Israel group, one that some of its most loyal supporters in the
Shiite community may be reluctant to embrace.
It has emboldened the
group’s critics in the Arab world and its Western-backed political
opponents in Lebanon who blame it for dragging Lebanon into Syria’s war,
The Lebanese state
news agency later published a photograph it identified as al-Laqis. The
image showed a man who appeared to be in his mid-40s, with neatly cut
black hair and a greying close-cropped beard, wearing beige-and-khaki
military clothing.
The Hezbollah statement claimed that Israel tried to kill him several times, but had failed.
“The Israeli enemy is
naturally directly to blame,” the statement said. “This enemy must
shoulder complete responsibility and repercussions for this heinous
crime and its repeated targeting of leaders and cadres of the
resistance.”
Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor denied any involvement.
“Israel has nothing to
do with this incident,” Palmor said. “These automatic accusations are
an innate reflex with Hezbollah. They don’t need evidence, they don’t
need facts, they just blame anything on Israel.”
Hezbollah has fought
several wars against Israel. Al-Laqis’ son died fighting Israel in the
monthlong 2006 war. Israel’s spy service has been suspected of
assassinating Hezbollah commanders for more than two decades.
In 1992, Israeli
helicopter gunships ambushed the motorcade of Hezbollah leader Sheik
Abbas Musawi, killing him, his wife, 5-year-old son and four bodyguards.
Eight years earlier, Hezbollah leader Sheik Ragheb Harb was gunned down
in south Lebanon.
But one of the biggest
blows for the group came in 2008 when Imad Mughniyeh, a top Hezbollah
military commander, was killed by a bomb that ripped through his car in
Damascus.
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