Hezbollah Commander Killed Outside Home in Lebanon

Hezbollah Commander Killed Outside Home in Lebanon

(AP) Hezbollah commander killed outside home in Lebanon
By ZEINA KARAM
Associated Press
BEIRUT
A senior commander for the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah was gunned down Wednesday outside his home in southern Beirut, security officials said. Hezbollah blamed Israel for the killing, something officials there quickly denied.

Hezbollah immediately announced the death of Hassan al-Laqis and described him as one of the founding members of the group, suggesting he was a high-level commander close to the Shiite party’s leadership. It said in a statement al-Laqis was killed as he returned home from work around midnight.

A Lebanese security official and another close to the Shiite group said assailants shot al-Laqis with a pistol equipped with a silencer at close range as he got out of his car outside of the residential building where he lived in the Hadath neighborhood, some two miles (three kilometers) southwest of Beirut.

He was shot five times in the head and neck, the Lebanese official said. Footage from the scene broadcast on Hezbollah’s al-Manar television station showed the parking lot stained with muddied footprints that led to a nearby small olive grove. Yellow police tape blocked off the area.

Al-Laqis was rushed to a nearby hospital but died early Wednesday from his wounds, the officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

The Lebanese state news agency later published a photograph it identified as al-Laqis. The image showed a man who appeared to be in his mid-40s, with neatly cut black hair and a graying close-cropped beard, wearing beige-and-khaki military clothing.

The Hezbollah statement accused Israel of being responsible for the killing. It said Israel tried to kill him several times, but had failed.

Israeli foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor denied Israeli involvement.

Yuval Steinitz, Israel’s minister of strategic affairs and intelligence, later told Israel Radio he wouldn’t comment on “rumors.”

Hezbollah has fought several wars against Israel. Al-Laqis’ son died fighting Israel in the monthlong 2006 war. Israel’s spy service has been suspected of assassinating Hezbollah commanders for more than two decades.

In 1992, Israeli helicopter gunships ambushed the motorcade of Hezbollah leader Sheik Abbas Musawi, killing him, his wife, 5-year-old son and four bodyguards. Eight years earlier, Hezbollah leader Sheik Ragheb Harb was gunned down in south Lebanon.

But one of the biggest blows for the group came in 2008 when Imad Mughniyeh, a top Hezbollah military commander, was killed by a bomb that ripped through his car in Damascus.

Current Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah has rarely appeared in public since the 2006 war. In a rare move, he traveled to neighboring Syria last week to meet the Syrian and Iranian presidents.

Hezbollah also has been fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces in that country’s civil war, sparking attacks across neighboring Lebanon.

Al-Laqis’ killing came a half an hour after Nasrallah ended a three-hour interview with a local television station, in which he accused Saudi Arabia of being behind last month’s twin bombings that targeted the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, killing 23 people.

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Associated Press writer Tia Goldenberg in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

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