Hizbollah's reconstruction of
Lebanon is winning the loyalty of disaffected
Shia
By Robert Fisk
08/24/06 "The
Independent" -- -- Hizbollah has
trumped both the UN army and the Lebanese
government by pouring hundreds of millions of
dollars - most of it almost certainly from Iran
- into the wreckage of southern Lebanon and
Beirut's destroyed southern suburbs. Its massive
new reconstruction effort - free of charge to
all those Lebanese whose homes were destroyed or
damaged in Israel's ferocious five-week assault
on the country - has won the loyalty of even the
most disaffected members of the Shia community
in Lebanon.
Hizbollah has made it clear that it has no
intention of disarming under the UN Security
Council's 1701 ceasefire resolution and
yesterday afternoon, Major-General Alain
Pellegrini, the commander of the UN Interim
Force in southern Lebanon - which the Americans
and British are relying upon to seize the
guerrilla army's weapons - personally confirmed
to me at his headquarters in Naqoura that "the
Israelis can't ask us to disarm Hizbollah".
Describing the ceasefire as "very fragile" and
"very dangerous", he stated that disarming
Hizbollah "is not written in the mandate".
But for now - and in the total absence of the
8,000-strong foreign military force that is
intended to join Unifil with a supposedly
"robust" mandate - Hizbollah has already won the
war for "hearts and minds". Most householders in
the south have received - or are receiving - a
minimum initial compensation payment of $12,000
(£6,300), either for new furniture or to cover
their family's rent while Hizbollah construction
gangs rebuild their homes. The money is being
paid in cash - almost all in crisp new $100
bills - to up to 15,000 families across Lebanon
whose property was blitzed by the Israelis, a
bill of $180m which is going to rise far higher
when reconstruction and other compensation is
paid.
In the 20sqkm of Beirut's southern suburbs which
have been destroyed or badly damaged in 35 days
of Israeli bombing, 500,000 residents - most of
them Shia - lost their homes. But money is being
poured in. For example, one Shia owning four
floors of an apartment block, Hussein Selim, has
already received $42,000 in cash for his
possessions and lost furniture. And Hizbollah
has pledged to rebuild the entire municipal area
from its own - or perhaps Iran's - funds.
A frightening side to this long-term promise for
believers in the UN ceasefire is that Hizbollah
has encouraged its Shia population to rent homes
in Khalde, south of Beirut, since it intends to
delay its entire city construction project for a
year - because of its conviction that the
ceasefire will break down and that another
Israeli-Hizbollah war will only wreck newly
built homes.
Across the devastation of southern Lebanon,
Hizbollah has now visited hundreds of thousands
of Shia families for details of their losses. In
some cases, Lebanese government officials -
largely distrusted by the local population -
have also made notes of compensation costs but
all the authorities have done so far is to start
the repair of water pipes and power lines. I
found bulldozers working for Hizbollah's "Jihad
al-Bena" company, clearing rubble from streets
and tearing down half-destroyed houses. "We are
doing this for nothing at the moment, but we
know we will get paid because we trust Sheikh
Hassan," a construction team leader told me.
Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, the Hizbollah leader,
has promised to indemnify all survivors.
Driving more than 100 miles across the south of
the country yesterday, the sheer enormity of
Hizbollah's task - and of the Lebanese
government's failure - becomes evident. Looking
across thegreen countryside of southern Lebanon,
the villages appear undamaged as they bask in
thesun. But the closer you get, the more you
notice vast grey fields of rubble that were once
homes. Some villages - Bint Jbeil, for example,
and Zibqin - have been half-destroyed.
In Zibqin itself, I found one especially
poignant ruin: the bombed remains of a mosque
well over 1,000 years old which the Lebanese
believe contains the body of Zein Ali Yaqin, son
of the Prophet Yacoub - Jacob in the Jewish
faith - and grandson of the Prophet Ibrahim, or
Abraham. Two of Abraham's sons - Yacoub and
Ismail (Ishmael) - define the split between
Islam and Judaism, the former believing God told
Abraham to sacrifice Ismail and the latter
contending it was Yacoub/Jacob who was to be
sacrificed. Zein Ali Yaqin is thus of precious
Jewish lineage - yet the casket containing his
mortal remains actually moved on the floor of
the shrine as Israeli bombs fell outside.
The explosives have blasted down an old façade
and tumbled hundreds of rocks from the original
outside wall of the green-domed mosque on the
slope below, cracking open the interior walls
and cascading wreckage on to the floor beside
the cloth-covered tomb. "The Israelis did all
this to their own man," Hussein Barakat said as
he hobbled down the road below. "Everyone here
knows the origin of our little shrine, but look
at it now." Mr Barakat is 69 and was the only
villager to remain in Zibqin when the rest of
the villagers fled the Israeli bombardment. He
has a wound on one finger and has been left half
deaf from the sound of explosions.
Bodies of civilians and Hizbollah fighters were
still being unearthed from the wreckage of
southern Lebanon this week; four brothers, all
members of Hizbollah it turned out, died
together under Israeli fire in the eastern town
of Khiam. Some civilian families searched in
vain through the rubble for relatives. In
Siddiqin, just east of Qana, I found one
shopkeeper who had spent hours trying to
discover the ruins of his two shops which had
been turned to dust by aerial bombs. But he,
too, believed that "Sheikh Hassan" would rebuild
his home. A few miles away, I found a
65-year-old woman clambering like a cat over the
pancaked roof of her home, looking for her
family gold in clefts between the packed
concrete.
It is Hizbollah's army of workers which has been
told to rebuild these villages. The guerrilla
army's political and economic organisation will
hire the tens of thousands of men to reconstruct
a virtual city within Beirut and turn south
Lebanon's wasteland back into the farming and
tobacco-growing villages that existed two months
ago.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited

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