BEIRUT, April 17 (Xinhua) -- Lebanon's Hezbollah
group on Tuesday accused the Lebanese March 14 majority coalition of seeking to
"normalize" relations with Israel and backing an alleged scheme to create a
U.S.-controlled Middle East.
Mohammed Raad, leader of Hezbollah's parliamentary
bloc, said that the Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc of Saad Hariri, leader of the
parliament majority, "went too far with a scheme to reconcile with the Zionists
and the Americans who want to create a new Middle East by describing the
resistance weapons as illegitimate."
Such a new Middle East, according to Raad, "is based
on recognizing the Zionist entity's (right to exist), normalizing relations with
it and abolishing any opposition to or resistance of Israeli aggressions."
Raad made the remarks while reading a statement to
reporters at Parliament headquarters in downtown Beirut, a few meters from the
makeshift tent city erected by the opposition, led by Hezbollah, since Dec. 1
with the declared objective of toppling Premier Fouad Seniora's majority
government.
Raad was responding to a statement released late
Monday by the Mustaqbal movement which criticized Hezbollah's weapons as
"illegitimate."
Hezbollah, which was instrumental in ending Israel's
22-yearoccupation of southern Lebanon in 2000, says it wants to hold onto its
weaponry to liberate Shebaa Farms, a disputed Israeli-occupied border area.
Lebanese dispute has lasted for about five months in
which politicians traded insults and their supporters clashed in the streets.
The disputes of the two rival political blocs
concentrated on two main issues, namely the opposition's demand for a veto in
the government and the majority's demand for the ratification of the
international tribunal to probe the assassination of former Lebanese Premier
Rafiq Hariri.