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Saturday 08 June 2013Hezbollah is a 'cancer,' say Arab mediaYnetnews - Iran's servants, an armed ethnic party and a faction parallel to al-Qaeda were only some of the labels applied over the weekend to Hezbollah in the Arab media, days after its participation in the battle for the Syrian strategic town of Qusair, which tipped the scales in favor of the forces supporting President Bashar Assad's regime. "It's a cancer that's eating away at an already fragile region and exploits the religious civil war in heinous ways in order to help the criminal regime," charged an editorial in Asharq Al-Awsat, an independent London based publication, typical of the tone adopted toward the Shiite terrorist group after it played a pivotal role in crushing the anti-Assad opposition in Qusair. Sweets from the locals, sweets from Hezbollah. 'Qusair in 2006 and today' "The Arab street has awoken to Hezbollah's true, ugly visage," Al-Hayat claimed."An organization enshrined for over three decades as resisting the occupier is but an armed ethnic group in the service of Iran." Hezbollah fighters celebrate victory in Qusair Asharq Al-Awsat went further, calling to declare Nasrallah a wanted criminal. Their position was echoed by Yusuf Qaradawi, a prominent Egyptian Islamic theologian, who urged all Suni Muslims to fight Assad's regime and "the devil's party" of Hezbollah. In addition to the sharp criticism in mainstream Arabic media, the group's involvement in the battle for Qusair saw graffiti spray-painted against it in the southern Lebanese town of Marjayoun, where it has usually enjoyed strong support. "Your turn will come, Shiites," and "Hezbollah, disappear!" read some of the writings. |