Lebanese minister denies Hezbollah storing weapons at Beirut airport

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epa11432462 Planes at Rafik Hariri international airport in Beirut, Lebanon, 23 June 2024. Lebanese Minister of Public Works and Transportation Ali Hamieh denied media reports of storing weapons at the Rafik Hariri international airport and invited media outlets and ambassadors or their representatives to tour the airport on 24 June. Hamieh held the press conference to respond to a report published by the British newspaper The Telegraph which quoted an anonymous airport worker claiming that 'Hezbollah is storing huge quantities of Iranian weapons, missiles, and explosives' in the civilian airport.  EPA-EFE/WAEL HAMZEH

British daily The Telegraph had said Hezbollah was storing missiles and rockets at Beirut airport, with “whistle-blowers” reporting the arrival of “unusually big boxes”.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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BEIRUT – Lebanon’s transport minister denied on June 23 that Hezbollah was storing weapons at Beirut airport, as fears grow of all-out war between the militant group and Israel.

Lebanese Transport Minister Ali Hamieh called a press conference to deny the allegations of “absurd articles” in the media, and attacked British daily The Telegraph.

The newspaper had said the Shi’ite militant group was storing missiles and rockets at the airport, with “whistle-blowers” reporting the arrival of “unusually big boxes”.

Backed by Iran, Hezbollah has been exchanging near-daily fire with Israeli forces in support of its ally, Hamas. The Palestinian movement has been at war with Israel since

Oct 7 when Hamas militants from Gaza attacked southern Israel.

“I am holding this press conference to clarify that everything that has been written in The Telegraph is false and to say that there are no weapons entering or leaving Beirut airport,” Mr Hamieh told journalists.

He spoke from Beirut International Airport, located in an area south of the capital where Hezbollah is influential.

Mr Hamieh invited ambassadors and journalists to inspect the airport on the morning of June 24, in a visit “open to all”.

In a statement, the Lebanese air transport union condemned the “simply erroneous statements and lies aimed at endangering Beirut airport and its employees, all civilians, and those who frequent it”.

Israel has for years accused Hezbollah of keeping precision rockets and missiles in different installations throughout Lebanon, including at a site near Beirut airport.

Hezbollah denies this.

More than eight months of

exchanges of fire between Hezbollah and Israeli forces

have left 480 people dead in Lebanon, mostly fighters, but also 93 civilians, according to an AFP tally.

The Israeli authorities say at least 15 soldiers and 11 civilians have been killed in the country’s north.

Cross-border exchanges and tension have escalated over the past two weeks after an Israeli air strike killed a senior Hezbollah commander. AFP


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