Mullahs support Lebanese Hezbollah with $1m of Iranians’ money
Despite Iran’s severe economic crises, Tehran is still
lavishing Hezbollah with huge amounts of the Iranian people’s money in order to
continue its destabilizing activities in Arab countries, as the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) managed to smuggle nearly a $1 million to the
Lebanese terrorist militia.
Crime details
The website AvaToday reported that the IRGC, in cooperation
with the Iranian Central Bank, exploited the national identity numbers of
citizens and registered false passports to allocate travel money for them, which
was then transferred through Mahan Air to Syria and Lebanon. A source was
quoted as saying, “Judge Hassan Babai, one of the judges responsible for
combating economic crimes in Iran, said that more than a billion dollars were
smuggled out of the country to Hezbollah and other groups abroad.”
In the same context, the Iranian regime refuses to join the
international Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in order to ensure that such
similar transfers are not revealed.
Hezbollah operates a network of militias and terrorist cells
deployed around the world, carrying out terrorist attacks, laundering money and
monitoring opponents.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has announced more than
once that his funds and equipment come from Iran, having previously said, “As
long as the money is in Iran, Hezbollah is safe and its money is secure.”
Lebanon at mercy of Iran
There are 57 countries, including the United States, that
have placed Hezbollah on terrorist lists and prohibited its activity. For
example, most Latin American countries consider the party a terrorist
organization, while about 70 countries subject Hezbollah's activities to strict
surveillance.
Earlier this year, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, called
for all countries around the world to designate the Lebanese Hezbollah militia
as a terrorist group. It is likely that Germany's announcement in April of
joining the group of countries that have included Hezbollah on the terrorist
lists may prompt the European Union to eliminate the distinction between its
banned military wing and its political party.
It is worth noting that Lebanon is suffering from a stifling
financial crisis due to Hezbollah's control of the economy, the depletion of
the country's resources, and the theft of subsidized goods for the benefit of
Iran's allies. Tehran is also suffering from worsening economic crises. In May,
Naser Mousavi Largani, member of the Iranian parliament’s economic committee,
announced that approximately 55% of Iranian families live below the poverty
line, while the Iranian Parliament Research Center indicated in a report that
40% of the Iranian people live below the poverty line.
Recently, a video clip circulated on the internet showing an
Iranian child who did not know how to eat bananas due to his extreme poverty
and inability to see the fruit.



