Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Hezbollah Expands in North Lebanon, Away From UN Peacekeepers

Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Gunshots echo from nearby valleys as a convoy of black sedans and SUVs carrying bearded men sweeps through the mountains north of Lebanon's Litani River. A sign on a road warns: ``Entry to This Area Forbidden. Hezbollah.''

The Lebanese Shiite movement, designated a terrorist group by the U.S., is expanding its reach north in the country by buying land to build villages and military camps, Lebanese government and Hezbollah officials say in interviews. The new land marks a new frontier for the group, whose military wing waged war with Israel for 33 days in the summer of 2006.

The Litani was once the informal boundary for Hezbollah- dominated territory in the south, next to Israel. By purchasing real estate, constructing villages and setting up hidden military zones in the mountains north of the river, Hezbollah is able to avoid the attention of 14,000 United Nations peacekeepers, who are stationed only south of the river and whose job it is to prevent Hezbollah rearming.

Government officials say Hezbollah is establishing a fortified defensive line along the Litani's north bank toward the Bekaa Valley, in eastern Lebanon. The Bekaa is a supply area for the militia and gateway for potential arms transfers from Syria.  

 
Thomas Braun, Lima, Peru

2 comments:

Blacksmith Jade said...

Hi guys, thanks for highlighting this post.

I posted a similar piece in August.

Anyway, I like the material on your blog and I think it would be interesting for us to exchange blog links and continue further interaction.

Let me know if you're interested by sending me an email (address in my blogger profile).

Thanks and keep blogging!

News Service said...

Sure we will give you a link, but I didn't see any email in your blogger profile. Please contact me at mew(at)mideastweb.org