Hezbollah Rejects Plans for Partition, Federalism, and Naturalization on Lebanon Constitution’s Centenary
Hezbollah says adherence to the constitution amended by Taif Agreement must prevent partition and calls for rejecting fragmentation projects, attributing unity to a national partnership and resistance rights.
What happened
Naharnet reports Hezbollah’s statement on the centenary of the Lebanese constitution, asserting that the Lebanese people face a sensitive domestic and regional moment requiring strict adherence to the constitution as amended by the Taif Agreement. Hezbollah emphasized rejecting any plans for partition, federalism, or naturalization, linking these projects to threats against Lebanon’s unity, sovereignty, and coexistence.
The party framed Lebanon as a final homeland for all citizens, underpinned by a national partnership that ensures balanced rights, dignity, and recognition of communities’ existential concerns. Hezbollah stressed these concerns are constitutional and not merely sectarian or political, insisting that protecting Lebanon’s land and people includes rejecting occupation and foreign interference.
Hezbollah explicitly linked its stance to resistance against what it called occupation and 'Zionist ambitions,' arguing that such resistance is a legitimate national right protected under Lebanon’s constitution and international obligations. The statement indirectly references government decisions aimed at limiting Hezbollah’s military and security activities, asserting no authority can delegitimize this resistance.
Known from the source
- Hezbollah issued a statement on the Lebanese constitution’s centenary rejecting plans for partition, federalism, and naturalization.
- Hezbollah calls for adherence to the constitution as amended by the Taif Agreement.
- Hezbollah views Lebanon as a final homeland defined by a national partnership among all citizens.
- Hezbollah describes resistance against occupation and ‘Zionist ambitions’ as constitutionally legitimate.
- The statement references government moves against Hezbollah’s military and security activities.
What remains unclear
The group also critiqued the sectarian political system as insufficient for producing a just and stable state, advocating full implementation of constitutional reforms stipulated in the Taif Agreement, particularly the abolition of political sectarianism. Hezbollah explained this does not mean eliminating particularities but building a just state with fair participation and coexistence guarantees.
What remains unclear: Verification of the specific government decisions referred to regarding Hezbollah’s military and security activities. Independent confirmation of the claim that rejecting partition, federalism, and naturalization plans aligns broadly with Lebanon’s official political consensus. Clarification on how other Lebanese political factions, government officials, and foreign actors respond to Hezbollah’s statement. Check if any updates or additional statements from UNIFIL or Lebanese security sources clarify the security context or reaction to Hezbollah’s claims.
Evidence note
Outside Brief has treated the source material as confirmed within the supplied source context, while retaining attribution to the original publisher.
Original source: Naharnet Lebanon. Open the source.
Outside Brief note: this story keeps the main source visible and separates what is reported from what remains unclear.