Tens of thousands of mourning Hizbollah’s nasrallah
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Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the veteran militant group of Hizbollah, will be buried on Sunday in Beirut, almost five months after being killed at the Israeli air strike, after a ceremony attended by tens of thousands of people.
Squeezing the paintings of Nasrallah and the draped in the yellow flags of Hizbollah, supporters from Lebanon and beyond the fulfilling stadium of the Camille Chamoun Camoun Sports City Stadium, and the crowds overflowed from the outside, for a funeral intended for forces for a movement that was beaten with its war with Israel.
Many were crying in the crowd when the coffins Nasrallah and his successor Hashem sapphire, who reigned over Hizbollah just a week before Israel also killed him, paradhed through the stadium.
Nasrallah, 64, was killed together with other higher figures in Hizbellah on September 27, when the Israeli air forces dropped dozens of bombs at one of the commands of the group in Beirut’s densely populated southern suburb of Dahiyeh.
As the procession continued on Sunday afternoon, the triangular formation of Israeli F15 and F35 aircraft flew at low heights over the capital, causing panic and anger among participants.
One woman, her face gave her tears, tightened her young son and looked up in fear.
The stadium broke out in the shouts of defiance, Emcee stated that the sound of the aircraft would not intimidate them. “The word of our call is greater than all your sounds,” he said, leading the pile of singing: “In your service, O Nasrallah. Death to Israel.”
Nasrallah’s murder was marked by an amazing blow just days after Israel escalated his campaign against the Iranian militant group into a full war, which would devastate his more leadership and diminish his weapons supplies.
The murder also emphasized how deep the Israeli intelligence nets penetrated into a group whose internal discipline was always praised.
The war was launched when Hizbollah began shooting rockets according to Israel on October 8, 2023. “In Solidarity” with Gaza, after Hamas’s deadly attack on October 7th.
At least 4,000 people were killed in Lebanon – many of them assumed that Hizbollah fighters – because Israeli rockets were racking in areas from which the group attracted their support.
In his 32 years at the helm, Nasrallah transformed the Shiite militant group into reputable forces in the Iranian regional network of Proxy, called the Ox of Resistance.
Until his death, he was appreciated, not only at home, but also in the entire Arab and Muslim world, because of his defense of Palestinians and his challenge to Israel.
Many of his supporters still clashed with his death.
“Some of us who came here, came with the hope that we would find [Nasrallah] Alive, that it will come out and it is easy for us to put a mind, “said the 21-year-old, but, one of the bereaved who attended the ceremony.” But when the coffin passed by us, we realized that we lost every sense of security. ”
“We realized that this country, this region, depends on a particular person and we lost it,” Ali added. “Nothing can describe the feeling. It was as if we had lost our father. Everyone lost their father here.”
Hadi, an Iraqi writer, said he flew out of Baghdad with a seven -funeral delegation. “Nasrallah is not just a martyr for Lebanon, not only for Shiu, but for all Islam.”
The side Hizbollah ally and President of the Nabih Berri Parliament attended the ceremony, together with the Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and the President of Parliament Mohammad-Balibaf, as well as religious, political and militia from Iraqa, Pakistan and Yena.
The ceremony was intended for the projection of Hizbollah’s lasting power, after the bruise that took it in the hands of its port.
The Israeli troops remain on five strategic positions on the hill in South Lebanon, despite the trial agreement signed by both countries, which wrote the full withdrawal of Israeli forces in mid -February. His air force also continued to carry out air attacks on what says Hizbollah are positions, including striking multiple goals on Sunday morning.
The militant group suffered a further blow after his Allied Bashar Al-Assad in Syria was overthrown last December, interrupting the vital path of supply.
The reduced group of the group is also reflected in the Lebanese post -war policy. For the first time after the end of the 15-year civil war in the country in 1990, the cabinet manifesto did not include a language that legitimates Hizbollah’s continuous arsenal.
Neither the Lebanese president nor the Premier attended on Sunday.
In an effort to enhance the morality, the address that is broadcast on the stadium screens from the undiscovered location has seen that the current leader of Hizbollah Naim Qassem assured the crowd that the group remained “strong”.
“We will not bear and not accept the continuation of our murder and interest as we look,” Qassem said.
The crowds began to dilute as he spoke.