http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1198517271453&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Jan 2, 2008 10:13 | Updated Jan 3, 2008 1:19 

'Hizbullah willing to negotiate returning body parts'
By JPOST STAFF AND AP 

Hizbullah is willing to negotiate returning to Israel body parts of several 
soldiers who were killed during the Second Lebanon War, Israel Radio reported 
Wednesday overnight. 

 
 
 
Hizbullah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah is expected to speak on abducted 
troops Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev 


Nasrallah made no mention of reservists Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser, whose 
capture sparked the war. 

The organization's leader Hassan Nasrallah was quoted as telling a Lebanese TV 
station that negotiations with Israel were taking place, but progressing 
slowly. 

He said that Israel seemed less anxious to receive the remains of several 
fallen soldiers than would seem following a deal made several weeks ago, when 
the body of a drowned Israeli was returned for a wounded Hizbullah fighter and 
the remains of two others. 

Nasrallah added that Hizbullah was preparing for a war against Israel but said 
another round of fighting is not expected in coming months. Hizbullah was 
following the IDF's maneuvers in the North and its attempts to recuperate from 
the war, Nasrallah was quoted as saying. 

Earlier in the interview, which lasted for two hours, Nasrallah said that 
"[Hizbullah] influences how Iran acts in the Middle East more than Iran 
influences [Hizbullah]." 

He also accused Israel of being behind the political assassinations in Lebanon. 

The Hizbullah leader lashed out at the United States, saying that it was 
intentionally acting to sabotage the Palestinian right of return by making sure 
Palestinian refugees stay in Lebanon. Furthermore, he accused the US of trying 
to control the Lebanese government and its army in order to force the country 
into a peace treaty with Israel and to destroy Hizbullah. 

In the interview, which was aired simultaneously by Hizbullah's Al-Manar 
television, the Hizbullah leader went on to say that no president would be 
elected in Lebanon unless the Syrian-backed opposition gets a veto power in the 
future government. 

Nasrallah also accused the anti-Syrian parliamentary majority of creating the 
current presidential deadlock by refusing a partnership with the Hizbullah-led 
opposition. 

"A solution lies in a partnership through a constitutional guarantee (and) 
through a veto power for the opposition, which represents more than half of the 
Lebanese people," said the Hizbullah leader. 

Nasrallah said his party supported Army Commander Gen. Michel Suleiman for 
president to replace pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud, whose term ended on 
Nov. 23 without a successor being chosen. 

But Suleiman's election, he said, "will not solve the problem without a 
national unity government in which the opposition gets a veto power." 

A parliamentary session to elect Lebanon's president was postponed for the 11th 
time on Dec. 28 with feuding factions deadlocked over a constitutional 
amendment and the shape of a future government. A new parliament session has 
been set for Jan. 12. 

The crisis over the presidency has capped a yearlong power struggle between 
anti-Syrian politicians, who hold a slim majority in parliament and support the 
Western-backed government of Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, and the opposition, 
led Hizbullah. 

Nasrallah blamed the deadlock on the ruling coalition, "which wants to fully 
control authority and rejects partnership with the other party." 

"Today, the real problem is the principle of partnership. A veto power means 
that the opposition becomes a partner (in government)," Nasrallah said. 

Lawmakers on both sides have agreed to back Suleiman as a compromise candidate, 
but parliament must first amend the constitution to allow a sitting military 
chief to become president. 

This process has been complicated by the opposition's demand for a new unity 
government that would give it veto power over major decisions. Opposition 
boycotts have thwarted attempts to choose a president by preventing a 
two-thirds quorum. 

The ruling coalition accuses the opposition of obstructing the presidential 
vote under orders from Syria and Iran, which back Hizbullah. In turn, the 
opposition claims pro-government groups in the parliament majority follow US 
policies. 

Nasrallah said opposition leaders will meet in the next 10 days to decide on 
next measures to deal with the ruling coalition. 

<<playerart.hdr.gif>>

Attachment: Satellite?blobcol=URLIMAGE&blobheader=image%2Fjpeg&blobheadername1=Cache-Control&blobheadervalue1=max-age%3D420&blobkey=ID&blobtable=JPVideo&blobwhere=1198517276910&cachecontrol=5%3A0%3A0+*%2F*%2F*&ssbinary=true
Description: Binary data

<<playerart.ctrls.gif>>

Reply via email to