Israel’s Netanyahu Vows to Keep Striking Hamas and Hezbollah

03 March 2020, Israel, Tel Aviv: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers an address. (dpa)
03 March 2020, Israel, Tel Aviv: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers an address. (dpa)
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Israel’s Netanyahu Vows to Keep Striking Hamas and Hezbollah

03 March 2020, Israel, Tel Aviv: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers an address. (dpa)
03 March 2020, Israel, Tel Aviv: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers an address. (dpa)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted on Sunday that Israel would do "everything necessary" to stop Hezbollah from regrouping in Lebanon and Hamas from doing the same in Gaza.

Over the past week Israel has hit multiple targets in neighboring Lebanon, with the Israeli military saying on Saturday it had struck Hezbollah launchers and military sites.

Gaza's civil defense agency said 21 people were killed and dozens more wounded in multiple Israeli air strikes on Saturday, as Hamas and Israel again traded allegations of violating the fragile ceasefire in place since October 10.

"We are continuing to strike terrorism on several fronts," Netanyahu said as he opened a cabinet meeting.

"This weekend, the Israeli military struck in Lebanon, and we will continue to do everything necessary to prevent Hezbollah from re-establishing its threat capability against us.

"This is also what we are doing in the Gaza Strip. Since the ceasefire, Hamas has not stopped violating it, and we are acting accordingly."

Saturday was one of the deadliest days since the US-brokered truce between Israel and Hamas came into effect, after two years of war.

The Israeli military said an "armed terrorist" had crossed the so-called yellow line -- the boundary within the Gaza Strip that Israeli forces have withdrawn behind -- and fired at Israeli soldiers.

In response, the military then "began striking terror targets in the Gaza Strip", it said.

Netanyahu claimed Sunday that Hamas had made "several attempts" to infiltrate beyond the yellow line to "try to harm our soldiers".

"We have thwarted this with great force and also retaliated and exacted a very heavy price. That includes many terrorists we eliminated," he added.

Netanyahu said it was an "absolute lie" that Israel needed outside approval before taking action.

"We decide independently of any factor, and that is how it should be. Israel is responsible for its own security," he said.

The Israeli military and the Shin Bet domestic security agency claimed that Saturday's strikes on Gaza "eliminated the head of supply and equipment in Hamas's production headquarters".

Alaa Haddadeh "operated to transfer weapons from Hamas's headquarters to battalion and field commanders", a joint statement said.



Algeria’s Kabylie Unites against MAK Separatist Project

Activists rally in Bejaia against separatist project, private accounts
Activists rally in Bejaia against separatist project, private accounts
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Algeria’s Kabylie Unites against MAK Separatist Project

Activists rally in Bejaia against separatist project, private accounts
Activists rally in Bejaia against separatist project, private accounts

Algeria’s Kabylie region is witnessing unusual momentum and activity, marked by initiatives opposing a separatist group’s plan to proclaim an “Independent State of Kabylie” on Sunday in France.

The move is one chapter in ongoing tensions with Algeria, which accuses Paris of “harboring enemies of its territorial unity.”

In Bejaia province, about 250 km east of Algiers and the largest city in Kabylie, residents and local groups have launched a series of initiatives in recent days to express their rejection of any proposal that undermines national unity.

The national flag has been widely hung from the facades of homes and shops, while taxis and public and private transport vehicles have also been decorated with the flag, creating a scene dominated by national colors across the city’s streets and neighborhoods.

Rejecting any threat to national unity

Coinciding with the anniversary of demonstrations held in 1960 during Algeria’s war of independence from France from 1954 to 1962, the Bejaia Directorate of Youth and Sports organized a convoy of cars adorned with national flags on Thursday.

The convoy set off from the city center and passed through several streets and villages under the slogan “Algeria is one and united,” under the supervision of local authorities.

In the same context, a real estate developer raised the national flag on the main facade of one of the city’s largest residential complexes, a 28-story building, in a move that drew positive reactions from residents and was seen as another expression of attachment to national symbols.

Bejaia’s neighborhoods have also witnessed a form of symbolic competition through the display of flags of varying sizes.

A large flag was raised in November 1, 1954 Square, with announcements of further initiatives to unfurl a massive flag atop Mount Gouraya, the city’s most prominent tourist landmark, with the participation of several local associations.

Bejaia University students issued a statement rejecting the separatist project carried by the Movement for the Self Determination of Kabylie, known by its French acronym MAK.

They reaffirmed their commitment to “the unity and sovereignty of Algeria” and called for confronting what they described as “narratives that undermine national cohesion,” referring to the planned declaration of an “Independent State of Kabylie,” which MAK says it will announce on Sunday in Paris under the leadership of its head, Ferhat Mehenni, who is wanted in Algeria on terrorism charges.

In the same vein, a number of intellectuals and activists in Bejaia expressed similar positions through statements and comments, while a popular gathering is expected to be held near the House of Culture on Sunday to voice opposition to the move.

The local journalists’ organization in Bejaia also announced its rejection of “any plan targeting the country’s unity,” stressing in a statement that “preserving a unified Algeria is a collective responsibility that is not open to compromise.”

Calls to confront MAK

Abdelkader Bengrina, head of the pro-government National Construction Movement party, said on Saturday during a meeting with party officials that “what this terrorist movement is attempting today is a desperate effort to turn back the clock and revive colonial ambitions that were buried decades ago.”

He added that “their determination to declare the independence of Kabylie from Algeria is nothing more than a new chapter in a farcical play aimed at testing the pulse of the Algerian nation and dragging the country into chaos.”

“We are fully confident that our security forces will strike with an iron fist against the plans of this movement and its operational cells wherever they exist, within the framework of the law,” he said.

Bengrina implicitly accused France of hosting separatists and their project, saying that “some European capitals are crying foul these days when one of their agents is exposed while posing as a tourist, even though his mission was to promote separatist discourse and encourage chaos.”

He was referring to French journalist Christophe Gleizes, who was sentenced by a court in Tizi Ouzou to seven years in prison on charges of “maintaining links with a leader of the Movement for the Self Determination of Kabylie.”

By contrast, Mehenni said in comments to the media in France, where he lives as a political refugee, that “there is no turning back,” arguing that “the policies pursued by Algeria in Kabylie since 1963 make independence the only solution.”

The movement was founded in 2001 following deadly clashes between security forces and segments of the Kabylie population that left 160 people dead.

Initially advocating autonomy, it later shifted toward full secession.

In May 2021, Algerian authorities designated the group a “terrorist organization,” accusing its members of planning violent acts and receiving foreign funding.

The movement relies heavily on emigrants originating from Kabylie, particularly in France and North America, but has little presence inside Algeria.

Authorities have arrested many of its members in the three Kabylie provinces of Tizi Ouzou, Bejaia and Bouira, all east of the capital, including MAK’s representative in the region, Bouaziz Ait Chebib.

Deep rooted political forces in the region have strongly rejected the separatist step, led by the Socialist Forces Front, which condemned what it described as “a separatist project that undermines Algeria’s national unity.”


Libya’s Sabratha on Alert after Killing of Militia Figure ‘Al-Amo’

Members of the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats (file photo)
Members of the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats (file photo)
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Libya’s Sabratha on Alert after Killing of Militia Figure ‘Al-Amo’

Members of the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats (file photo)
Members of the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats (file photo)

Security forces fanned out across the coastal city of Sabratha, 70 km west of Tripoli, after militia leader Ahmed al-Dabbashi, known as al-Amo, was killed during a raid, triggering clashes that left two members of a state security body dead, residents and officials said.

Witnesses reported a heavy security presence across the Libyan city on Saturday, as the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats, a formation aligned with the Government of National Unity, said it had established control over Sabratha after neutralizing al-Amo.

The apparatus said late on Friday that two members of its western branch died of their wounds after what it described as an attack by criminal groups loyal to al-Amo near a traffic light by the city hospital. It said the deaths would be recorded in its roll of military honor, and vowed to keep pursuing anyone it deems a threat to Libya’s security.

Earlier, the apparatus said al-Amo was killed when its units stormed a hideout used by his network. It said his brother, Saleh al-Dabbashi, was arrested and that six of its personnel were seriously wounded and taken to intensive care.

A Libyan security source, speaking to local media on condition of anonymity, said the Defense Ministry in the Tripoli-based government was reviewing the situation after losing influence in several districts from Janzour in the east to the outskirts of Ajilat in the west.

The source accused the ministry of having previously backed and directed al-Amo to tie down forces from the nearby city of Zawiya on Sabratha's western flank. The Defense Ministry did not immediately comment.

Although the apparatus is an official body within the unity government, it operates with a degree of autonomy in the field, putting it in frequent friction with Defense Ministry-aligned formations in western Libya. The apparatus’s deputy chief is Mohamed Bahroun, known as “al-Far,” a powerful figure in the west.

Strategic coastal hub

Sabratha sits on the main coastal highway that runs from the Tunisian border through western towns to Zawiya and Janzour on the approaches to Tripoli.

Control of the city confers leverage over a vital overland supply route between Tunisia and the capital, and helps block any western advance toward Tripoli.

Sabratha also offers access to a small port and lies close to energy infrastructure, including the strategic Mellitah oil and gas complex.

Since 2014, the city has been a flashpoint for competing authorities in Tripoli and their allied local forces, as well as factions aligned with eastern-based rivals.

It has seen repeated bouts of fighting and shifts in control, most dramatically in 2016 when ISIS briefly seized the city before being driven out with US air support. The episode cemented Sabratha’s weight in both local and international security calculations.

In recent years Sabratha has become a center of gravity for the Apparatus for Combating Security Threats, which reports to the Interior Ministry. That presence has fueled regular friction with Defense Ministry units and long-standing local militias.

Power balance shifts

Analysts say the killing of al-Amo and the apparatus’s subsequent sweep through the city mark a sharp turn in the local balance of power, strengthening the apparatus while dealing a blow to Prime Minister Abdul Hamid al-Dbeibah’s government west of the capital.

The developments came as al-Dbeibah inaugurated Libya’s National Museum in Tripoli on Friday evening at an event attended by foreign diplomats, describing the museum as a repository of national memory and a legacy for future generations.

Al-Dabbashi, long wanted internationally on allegations of human trafficking and narcotics smuggling, retained loyalists in and around Sabratha despite periodic crackdowns.

His death, the arrest of his brother, and the deployment of state units across key intersections suggest an effort by the apparatus to consolidate control and deter reprisals.

The situation in Sabratha remained tense on Saturday, residents said, with security units maintaining checkpoints and patrols along the coastal road and within the city.


Hezbollah Creates New Entities to Evade Pressure on Al-Qard Al-Hasan

One of Al-Qard Al-Hasan’s buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs. AP file photo
One of Al-Qard Al-Hasan’s buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs. AP file photo
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Hezbollah Creates New Entities to Evade Pressure on Al-Qard Al-Hasan

One of Al-Qard Al-Hasan’s buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs. AP file photo
One of Al-Qard Al-Hasan’s buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs. AP file photo

Hezbollah in Lebanon has begun taking steps that appear likely to lead to the closure of its financial arm Al-Qard Al-Hasan, or to sharply curtail its role, after mounting US pressure and measures by Lebanon’s central bank. 

The moves are part of what sources describe as a legal repositioning inside the country, aimed at easing international and domestic pressure to shut the institution down.

As part of this shift, the group has established a licensed commercial entity that has begun carrying out part of Al-Qard al-Hasan’s activities by providing loans to its supporters. There are expectations that additional institutions could be created to take over other functions.

Hezbollah had previously rejected US demands conveyed through Lebanese authorities to close the institution, accusing Washington of seeking to “dry up financial resources in order to eliminate the party’s presence and prevent it from providing social services,” according to remarks by its Secretary-General Naim Qassem in a speech last month.

In recent years, Al-Qard Al-Hasan has been known as an institution that provides interest free loans, secured by gold or financial guarantees from other depositors. 

The number of its clients exceeded 300,000 people in 2024, benefiting from its concessional loans. It also provided agricultural, industrial, and commercial loans to small enterprises. 

The institution, which operated more than 34 branches across Lebanon, also distributed financial checks to those affected by the war, funded by Hezbollah after the latest conflict.

Amid international pressure on Lebanon to shut it down, the institution appeared to adopt what financial sources told Asharq Al-Awsat was a “legal repositioning policy,” seeking “legal alternatives that would allow it to continue operating,” following a series of domestic measures, including a decision by the Banque du Liban barring dealings with it.

Commercial entity

Al-Qard Al-Hasan has indeed begun to transform, with the first signs appearing in the form of a commercial company specializing in the buying and selling of gold on installment plans, which was established and began operating in early December. 

Two sources in Beirut’s southern suburbs told Asharq Al-Awsat they were surprised, after completing transactions at the institution, to receive invoices issued by an entity called “Jood,” rather than Al-Qard Al-Hasan.

One of them said they went to the institution to obtain a small loan of $1,800 secured by his wife’s gold, only to discover that procedures had changed. “They did not carry out a gold pledge transaction as before,” they said. 

“Instead, the process was conducted through two contracts. The first involved purchasing the gold in exchange for an official invoice, followed by another commercial transaction in which the same quantity of gold was sold back to us on installments, also against an official invoice.”

Under the purchase contract, he said, payments are made over 18 months in fixed monthly installments, with the gold delivered 15 days after the final installment is paid. “It is the same method used in the past, but the paperwork is different,” they added.

Promise of sale by installments

The second source said they were also able to obtain a loan in the same way and found that the installment purchase invoice included a contract with four conditions. They explained that the invoice was issued by “Jood” and included the company’s registration number and a fiscal invoice number, indicating it is subject to Lebanon’s commercial transaction laws and applicable regulations.

Asharq Al-Awsat reviewed the terms of the invoice included in the contract, which state that the invoice “constitutes a promise of sale by installments, and the sale is not considered final until the full value of the invoice is paid.”

The second clause states that all installments become immediately due if the buyer fails to pay two installments. It also authorizes the buyer, as the invoice holder, to make payment on his behalf. The fourth clause stipulates that the buyer must collect the gold within a period not exceeding 15 days from the date of paying the final installment, and that in the event of a delay, storage fees of $0.02 per gram per month will be added.

Fragmentation of services

This step is seen as part of a broader transformation plan by the institution in response to external and domestic pressure to shut it down. 

Lebanese sources familiar with international demands said the shift “signals the failure of all attempts to rescue it through talks between the party and Lebanese authorities.”

They added that “the party’s conviction has pushed it to fragment the services provided by the institution in a way that allows it to continue offering some services if it complies with demands to close it entirely.”

The association states online that it “aims to help people by granting loans for specified periods, contributing to solving some of their social problems,” and that it seeks to “strengthen the spirit of cooperation, mutual support, and solidarity among members of society.”

The sources said that following the fragmentation of services, gold pledging has been removed from the institution’s functions and transferred to the commercial entity, enabling it to continue providing services within the bounds of the law. This follows the suspension of other services, including ATM services. 

The move also sends a message to Lebanese authorities that these services are being offered within a legal framework, through official invoices, and are subject to taxes and commercial transaction regulations.

However, the same sources noted that in this arrangement, official financial disclosure applies to clients rather than depositors and sources of funds, “which complicates the assumption of international acceptance of this transformation.”

They said three proposals had previously been submitted to regularize the status of Al-Qard Al-Hasan, all of which were rejected by the United States. The first was to operate as a mutual aid association. 

The second was to become a licensed financial company, which was also rejected by the Banque du Liban. 

The third proposal was to operate as a financial cooperative providing concessional loans, similar to cooperatives that exist in Lebanon and abroad, subject to Lebanese law and declaring its clients. All proposals were “rejected outright,” the sources said.

US rejection

This assessment aligns with Lebanese financial estimates that any transformation by the institution is unlikely to gain US approval. A senior Lebanese financial source told Asharq Al-Awsat it was “unlikely that this repositioning will be accepted by the US Treasury Department, which scrutinizes tedious financial details in Lebanon.”

Lebanon, the source said under conditions of anonymity, is “under strict oversight by the US Treasury due to widespread cash circulation,” and US estimates indicate that cash outside the banking sector cannot be controlled. 

“This measure is part of the cash economy operating outside the banking sector,” they said.

They added that the repositioning would not satisfy the United States, which has decided the institution must be shut down and has conveyed that to the Lebanese state. 

“Changing the form will not satisfy them as long as the core remains,” they said, referring to the continued existence of Al-Qard Al-Hasan and the continuation of its services in another guise.

“From a legal standpoint, and under Lebanon’s prevailing laws, excluding the central bank, a commercial company can carry out buying and selling activities, including installment sales,” they said. 

“But that does not mean the fundamental problem has been resolved, which is US rejection, because liquidity will remain outside the banking sector and will continue, from the American perspective, to be viewed with suspicion under the current political circumstances.”