Having lost considerable influence in Europe and other parts of the world over the chaotic Brexit process, Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May is seeking to gain leverage by boxing-in Hezbollah. British politics under the Conservative government not only appears to have lost the plot, but many may not be faulted if they also ask whether May has lost her marbles as well.
Lebanon’s Hezbollah, it has been announced by Home Secretary Sajid Javid, is henceforth to be designated as a “terrorist organization” in its entirety. To date, Britain has only designated the armed wing of the group. The reason given for this move is plainly ridiculous and alludes to why many wonder if Britain has run into a cul-de-sac of its own making. According to Javid, he decided to proscribe Hezbollah because it is “continuing in its attempts to destabilize the fragile situation in the Middle East.”
Explosive language indeed. With or without context and substance, some people, especially Tories and anyone, left or right, allied to Israel, will accept the Home Secretary’s misleading statement without question.
Predictably, some British tabloids have amplified the argument without any attempt to unpack it rationally and logically. In line with their favored state’s propaganda, which has repeatedly demonized Hezbollah, pro-Israel lobbyists in Britain have given their approval to Javid’s move.
Once the partisan designation comes into force, any British citizen found supporting Hezbollah will be charged with committing an offense carrying a sentence of up to 10 years in prison. It is an outrageous assault on civil liberties lacking any grounding in law or morality.
Meanwhile, Britain’s foreign policy and armed forces continue to inflict pain and suffering in most of the conflicts in the Middle East in which Muslims are victims. Whether wars of attrition or wars of occupation, regime change or plunder of resources, the British government is intrinsically involved in most. Indeed, from Afghanistan to Libya via Iraq and Syria, under one pretext or another, Britain has long been at the forefront of efforts to “destabilize the fragile situation in the Middle East”.
Furthermore, the devastation wrought in Palestine since Britain’s immoral and illegal Balfour Declaration of 1917, which led to a colonial entity being inflicted upon the indigenous Muslim and Christian Palestinians, causing their dismemberment as a community and massive displacement, remains a disgracefully bloody legacy of which no reasonable British citizen can be proud.
How dare Sajid Javid threaten legitimate anti-colonial movements? The arrogance of the man is breathtaking.
A Christian supporter of Hezbollah, carries a picture of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah along a Lebanese flag as she listens to Nasrallah’s speech in Beirut, Lebanon, Sept. 3, 2010.
Does the May government not understand that by handing over Palestine to largely European Zionist settlers, arming them and providing them political cover at the UN, Britain was and remains responsible for the ultimate catastrophe in the heart of the Middle East? The creation of Israel facilitated by the British in a region carved up by Britain and France with their 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement, has resulted in it being the epicenter of global instability, with the Zionist state at the core. The price of British colonial policies is being paid on a daily basis by their victims across the Muslim world.
Far from being a terrorist organization, Hezbollah is a popular political, military and social movement that wields considerable power in Lebanon. Its presence in defense of Lebanese sovereignty against Israeli aggression has earned it respect and support across Arab countries even if neo-colonial monarchies such as Saudi Arabia — another British creation — have teamed up with Israel to crush it.
Hezbollah is actually an integral part of Lebanon’s government, having successfully fielded candidates in regular democratic elections. Its leadership and membership is intertwined with Lebanese culture, society, economics and politics. Although backed by Iran, it is anything but a foreign imposition; Hezbollah is a home-grown movement with outstanding military capacity to ensure that the homeland is protected from external aggression.
Its fighters dislodged twenty years of ruthless Israeli occupation of Southern Lebanon and restored the country’s territorial integrity. Poised as it is to ward off Israel’s colonial expansionist plans, Hezbollah is thus a crucial component of Lebanon’s civil and military defense forces.
With a history steeped in empire building, though, Britain has a natural affinity with Israel’s ambitions to subjugate and dominate the Muslim world, rather than to support legitimate resistance to such colonialism. Britain’s legacy of control and domination which spanned many continents is difficult to set aside; Javid’s pompously ignorant declaration is evidence of that.
Slightly further east, the ongoing and pressing issue of Kashmir is yet another reminder of the way that British colonialism was adept at “divide and rule”. The current hawkish posturing of India and its air raids on Pakistani territory illustrate that one legacy of the British Empire is a perpetual cycle of war and unrest. Britain is not only responsible for the Zionist imposition on Palestine but is also implicated directly in the unresolved question of Kashmiri independence. The plebiscite promised at the time of partition has never been held.
It is issues such as this which British politicians should prioritize in order to redress past and present injustices, rather than seek scapegoats in legitimate anti-colonial movements. They need to understand and accept that the gung-ho rhetoric and policies of colonial days past have no place in the 21st Century.
It is to be hoped that civil society in Britain takes up the duty to challenge this “terrorist designation” by Theresa May’s government which has compromised human, legal and civil rights at a stroke. The Prime Minister’s battle for survival in the midst of the Brexit chaos is no excuse for such an abuse of power.
Top Photo | Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May looks to the media as she greets Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman outside 10 Downing Street in London, Wednesday, March 7, 2018. Alastair Grant | AP
Iqbal Jassat is an Executive Member of Media Review Network in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Source | MEMO
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