Thaw sets in EU-Hezbollah ties

Author: 
Rita Daou | AFP
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2009-06-14 03:00

BEIRUT: EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana held unprecedented talks with a Hezbollah official yesterday, during a Beirut visit to reaffirm Europe’s support for Lebanon after last week’s polls.

He met in Parliament with MP Hussein Hajj Hassan, whose Shiite movement is considered a terrorist organization by the United States and which was defeated in the June 7 general election.

“Lists of terrorist groups are not the same in every country,” Solana told a news conference when asked about the US blacklist of the Shiite militant group.

“Hezbollah is a member of the Lebanese society and it is represented in the Lebanese Parliament and it will bear responsibilities,” he said before leaving for Egypt at the end of a two-day visit.

For his part Hajj Hassan siad that the meeting “means more EU overture toward Hezbollah, and one at a higher level.” “This also means better communication for the European Union with the region and its parties,” he said after the talks, adding that the move will “move the EU toward more realism.” Hajj Hassan is among 11 Hezbollah candidates who won seats in the 128-seat Parliament.

Solana said Lebanon’s rival political leaders “realize the responsibility they face” and he expected them to “find a way to push the country forward and form a cabinet” as soon as possible.

The Hezbollah-led opposition wants to have veto power on key issues in any new government, as they did in the outgoing Cabinet, but majority leaders are opposed to this.

Solana, who also met with Lebanese President Michel Suleiman, officials and party leaders, earlier said that the EU “is pleased with the 2009 parliamentary election results.

“They reflected the maturity of the country,” he said. Lebanon was at risk of civil war last year after political differences between the rival camps boiled over.

“This (election) will help very much open a new page for the future of the country, prosperity, democracy and peace,” Solana said.

“The EU will continue to support Lebanon, and the EU will continue its efforts, in regard to pursuing peace in the Middle East, in cooperation with the international community and the United States.” Solana’s trip coincided with a visit by US envoy George Mitchell who vowed on Friday that Washington would not sacrifice Lebanon as it seeks comprehensive peace in the Middle East.

Before Mitchell headed on to Syria, the two diplomats met briefly to discuss cooperation between the EU and the United States, whose President Barack Obama has vowed to help kick-start stalled Arab-Israeli peace negotiations.

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