logo
Mohammad Barakat accuses Hezbollah of threatening his family

Mohammad Barakat accuses Hezbollah of threatening his family

L'Orient-Le Jour10 hours ago
Activist Mohammad Barakat, a well-known critic of Hezbollah, accused the leadership of Hezbollah on Thursday of "waging an open war against [his] family."
Speaking to L'Orient Today Friday, Barakat said that his sister-in-law was 'surrounded by a group of women in Hay al-Selom in the southern suburbs of Beirut Thursday while she was visiting her family who told her: 'Isn't your husband Mohamad Barakat's brother? What are you doing here?''
According to Barakat, on the same day, while his father was taking a walk near his house in Aramoun, a man came to him and told him that he 'reads my work on Facebook and what I write' and warned him that 'he knows where he lives.'
Barakat said that ARTE, the French-German channel, where filming with one of his team's members in Nabatieh, Mahmoud Shoeib, when the crew was stopped by a checkpoint for Hezbollah, their phones and footage were checked, including investigating the team of journalists, despite the team having an approval from the Lebanese Army to film.'
On the same day, another member of his team was allegedly threatened to be killed 'along with his family in Baalbeck, the person wished to remain anonymous for security reasons.'
'Hezbollah's incitement campaign has reached the point of attacking women and children'
In a post on his X account, the editor-in-chief of the news website Asas Media called on the president, State Security, the Internal Security Forces and the Lebanese Army to act, stating that "state apparatuses remain silent — to put it mildly."
In his message, in which he claimed that "Hezbollah's incitement campaign has reached the point of attacking women and children," he shared a post by his brother, Bahaa Barakat.
"My family and I face harassment every time we enter or approach areas known for their affiliation [with Hezbollah]. The reasons range from simple disagreements to differing opinions, but the main reason remains the fact that I am Mohammad Barakat's brother. These incidents have recently intensified, to the point where we've decided not to go to the southern suburbs [of Beirut, Hezbollah's stronghold] or other similar areas," Bahaa Barakat wrote.
"This human scum, who threaten physical assault and hurl insults at every opportunity, are defeated, humiliated, and resigned — struggling in the abyss they've thrown themselves into. You are cowards, unworthy even of insults, for you are beneath them. You, from whom only traitors and diminished beings emerge — the oncoming train will crush you, and history will discard you to where you truly belong."
In October last year, Mohammad Barakat was targeted by a lawsuit for 'sectarian incitement' filed by Sheikh Ali Khatib, Vice President of the Higher Shiite Council. In response, Barakat — founder of the independent Shiite group Nahwa al-Inqaz ('Towards Salvation'), established in December 2024 — filed a legal complaint against the religious leader on April 24. In it, he requested that the Court of Cassation launch an investigation into Sheikh Khatib, accusing him of 'embezzling public funds and illegally occupying real estate.'
Contacted by L'Orien Today, a Hezbollah source stated: 'Mohammad Barakat continues to attack us and claims every week that his family has been threatened. He stages this story at the expense of Hezbollah with the aim of attracting more attention on social media. These are false statements, fake information and filled with hypocrisy.'
Barakat had been summoned in November last year by the head of the Court of Cassation, Jamal Hajjar, based on Sheikh Khatib's complaint following statements made during a television appearance on Al-Jadeed on Oct. 28, 2024.
During the show, Barakat alleged that Khatib had restored four buildings in Hazmieh (Mount Lebanon) and was keeping them at his disposal, although they could house "200 families." His accusations came in the context of the war between Hezbollah and Israel (from October 2023 to November 2024), which had displaced thousands of Lebanese from southern Lebanon. After questioning, Judge Hajjar released him under the condition of choosing an official residence.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

William Noun summoned over 'sectarian incitement' and 'alleged violation of Israel boycott law'
William Noun summoned over 'sectarian incitement' and 'alleged violation of Israel boycott law'

L'Orient-Le Jour

time6 hours ago

  • L'Orient-Le Jour

William Noun summoned over 'sectarian incitement' and 'alleged violation of Israel boycott law'

The Central Criminal Investigation Department summoned activist William Noun, brother of a victim of the Aug. 4, 2020, Beirut Port explosion, for questioning on Tuesday at noon at the Justice Palace, following a complaint accusing him of inciting sectarian strife and violating Lebanon's law on dealings with Israel, Noun told L'Orient Today Friday. The complaint, sent to L'Orient Today by Noun on Friday, was filed by Hassan Ibrahim, a lawyer reportedly close to Hezbollah, after a speech Noun delivered during the fifth anniversary commemoration of the Beirut port explosion on Aug. 4. Speaking to L'Orient Today Friday, Noun said: "They accused me of sympathizing with Israel, which isn't even true because I didn't even use the word Israel. And if I were to mention it, I would mention it negatively. Accusing me of collaborating with Israel is something funny. Inciting sectarian violence is part of what they have said against me." L'Orient Today viewed the video of his remarks and was able to confirm that Noun did not mention Israel. The complaint alleges that during his speech, audience members began chanting 'Hezbollah is a terrorist organization,' to which Noun responded that "there is no one left of them," in apparent reference to losses Hezbollah suffered during its 2024 war with Israel. According to the plaintiff, Noun was 'clearly alluding to the resistance's 5,000 martyrs who fell during the Israeli war against Lebanon.' At the end of his speech, Noun said, 'Just because Hassan Nasrallah has died doesn't mean all his sins are forgiven.' In his complaint, Ibrahim argued that Noun 'expressed dangerous empathy with the Israeli enemy, provoking the popular base of the resistance, which makes up at least half of the Lebanese population, among whom it is rare to find a family that has not offered a martyr during the brutal aggression that Lebanon endured.' Ibrahim said that this statement referred to 'Hezbollah martyrs who were killed during the war and after the cease-fire on Nov. 27, which Israel is not abiding by.' On his Facebook page, Ibrahim added, "Those martyrs are our friends, relatives, and school friends, and their legacy should be respected," alongside a photo of the complaint. The complaint accuses Noun of making inflammatory remarks at a sensitive national moment, stating that his comments "incite sectarian and partisan divisions," particularly given his different sectarian background from those he criticized. It further claims his language "resembles that of the Israeli enemy" and violates Lebanon's boycott law. The filing also pointed to Noun's affiliation with a political group critical of Hezbollah, suggesting he supports a 'hostile approach to the resistance,' and warns that accusing Hezbollah of involvement in the port explosion is a 'serious and dangerous' allegation that could undermine civil peace.

PM Salam condemns Hezbollah chief's civil war 'threats'
PM Salam condemns Hezbollah chief's civil war 'threats'

LBCI

time9 hours ago

  • LBCI

PM Salam condemns Hezbollah chief's civil war 'threats'

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam on Friday slammed what he described as Hezbollah "threats" of civil war after the group's leader vowed to fight against government efforts to disarm it. Publishing on X an excerpt from an interview he gave to a Saudi newspaper, Salam said the remarks by Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem "constitute an implicit threat of civil war", calling "any threat or intimidation related to such a war is totally unacceptable." AFP

Lebanon was working on disarmament plan before US proposal, Nassar says
Lebanon was working on disarmament plan before US proposal, Nassar says

L'Orient-Le Jour

time10 hours ago

  • L'Orient-Le Jour

Lebanon was working on disarmament plan before US proposal, Nassar says

Justice Minister Adel Nassar stated Friday that "the Lebanese government was already working on a plan to withdraw Hezbollah's weapons even before the presentation of the American proposal," stating that "any weapon outside the framework of official authorities is contrary to the Constitution and laws, and this is not a matter of debate or opinion." His remarks, in an interview with the Amman-based Al-Ghad TV channel reported by the state-run National News Agency (NNA), came as Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem said Friday in very forceful terms that the party would not give up its weapons as long as Israel continued its attacks. Qassem also warned the Lebanese government of a confrontation if it persisted in the decision made on Aug. 5 to set a timetable for disarmament, in accordance with an American proposal that also calls for the withdrawal of Israel from territories its army occupies in Lebanon. This proposal was relayed by envoy Tom Barrack, who visited Beirut several times at the start of the summer to promote it. Not 'suicide' In response to Hezbollah's position that handing over its weapons would be "suicide," a statement made earlier this week by the head of the party's parliamentary bloc, Mohammad Raad, Nassar argued that "the real suicide lies in the choice of unilateral adventurism that has led to military confrontations, causing martyrs and destruction." This was a direct criticism of Hezbollah's decision on Oct. 8, 2023, to open a front in southern Lebanon in support of Gaza. The opening of this front led to over a year of confrontations, which escalated into near-total war in the last three months before the imperfect cease-fire was reached at the end of last November. "The choice of the state is the guarantor for everyone, and the conditions in the Middle East are evolving, which requires vigilance from all," the minister added. "Hezbollah cannot consider handing over its weapons as suicide, especially since it signed on to the decisions of the ministerial statement," drafted in the wake of the Nawaf Salam government's orientation earlier in the year, Nassar added. "A lawmaker who is a partner in the government cannot tell it 'do what you want'; partners are expected to help build the state, not block it," he said, while stressing that he "does not believe any political party in Lebanon wants to provoke a confrontation with the Lebanese Army." Nassar stated that "the Lebanese Army has begun extensively recovering Hezbollah's weapons south of the Litani and has started inventorying weapons north of the Litani." He added that "all political components, including Hezbollah, will eventually respect the project of state-building, and that Lebanon will not be pushed toward new adventures or internal conflict."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store