BEIRUT — Iranian fuel has entered Lebanon without state
authorization and despite US sanctions following arrangements by Hezbollah,
consecrating the party's status as the main powerhouse in the crisis-hit
country.
اضافة اعلان
"This latest event gives yet another confirmation that
Hezbollah has considerably increased its sway over the Lebanese state,"
said political scientist Karim Emile Bitar.
"It is no longer even trying to hide behind the veneer
of legality offered by official institutions," he said.
Lebanon, grappling with its worst-ever financial crisis,
defaulted on its debt last year and can no longer afford to import key goods,
including petrol for vehicles and diesel for generators during almost
round-the-clock power cuts.
Fuel shortages have forced motorists to queue for hours —
sometimes days — while electricity outages have plunged the country into
darkness, paralyzing hospitals, schools, and government offices.
Despite being an integral part of the state — it holds seats
in parliament and backs several cabinet ministers — Hezbollah has bemoaned the
state's failure and vowed to step in with its own solution.
The party, which is designated by the US as a terrorist
group and is the only militia to have kept its arsenal after Lebanon's
1975–1990 war, arranged for dozens of trucks carrying
Iranian fuel to enter Lebanon
via Syria last week.
The delivery was not officially approved by the government
and the trucks entered via an illegal crossing for a transaction that violates
US and other sanctions.
The move, although a first, falls in line with the
Iran-backed party's long-standing autonomy from a weak centralized state that
has stood idly on the sidelines as the group deployed in Syria in 2013 and
repeatedly engaged in military confrontations with southern neighbor Israel.
"Hezbollah's latest move weakens the state and
perceptions of the state," political activist and energy expert Laury
Haytayan told AFP.
"It's very clear that the state is unable to stop
Hezbollah. The state is watching and it's paralyzed and it can't take any
action."
'Violation of sovereignty'
A total of 80 trucks carrying four million liters of Iranian
fuel oil entered Lebanon on Thursday, days after a first Iranian ship reached
the Syrian port of Baniyas.
Three more Iranian ships are expected to deliver fuel oil
and petrol in the coming weeks, according to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah.
The shipments were purchased by Lebanese businessmen,
according to Iran, most likely with ties to Hezbollah.
The Lebanese government, headed by Prime Minister Najib
Mikati and which was finally formed last week after a year-long delay, has
distanced itself from the scheme.
Speaking to CNN last week, Mikati described the Hezbollah
delivery as "a violation of Lebanese sovereignty" but said he
believed Lebanon would not be hit by US sanctions because the government had
not authorized the shipment.
The first fuel delivery — which Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV says
can only cover the needs of a single major institution such as a hospital for
one month — is a "test", Haytayan said.
If it goes unanswered by the US, then many traders may be
emboldened to stock up despite the threat of sanctions, especially if
shortages persist, the expert said.
Distribution
Fuel distribution will be managed by Hezbollah auxiliaries
that are already sanctioned and run no additional risk.
Al-Amana, a fuel distribution company which is owned by
Hezbollah and has been under US sanctions since February 2020, distributed a
first batch of around 100,000 liters of fuel oil in the southern Hezbollah
stronghold of Tyre and Beirut on Saturday, Al-Manar reported, without
specifying the exact beneficiaries.
On Sunday, Al-Amana distributed another 100,000 liters of
fuel oil in Mount Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley which is widely
considered a Hezbollah bastion, Al-Manar said.
The first deliveries were all free of charge after Nasrallah
on Monday said his group would donate fuel to government hospitals, nursing
homes, orphanages, water pumping stations, municipalities, civil defense units,
firefighter brigades, and the Lebanese Red Cross.
The rest will be sold on the market in Lebanese pounds at a
price less than the subsidized rate set by the state, Al-Amana said Sunday,
making it a serious competitor for official importers selling stocks in US
dollars at a much higher price.
Nasrallah said last week he hopes municipalities will
oversee distribution.
But he stressed individual institutions could also source
fuel directly from Hezbollah if a particular municipality refuses to engage
with it for political reasons.
Dispelling rumors that the fuel will only benefit
Hezbollah's own community, Nasrallah said it was intended "for all regions
and for all Lebanese" regardless of their political or sectarian
affiliation.
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