Hezbollah denies reports about Nasrallah’s successor

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Hezbollah denies reports about Nasrallah’s successor

Several media outlets have claimed that Hashem Safieddine, head of the group’s Executive Council, has been appointed as the new secretary-general

Hezbollah has pushed back against media reports that Lebanese cleric Hashem Safieddine will succeed the late Hassan Nasrallah as the group’s secretary-general.

On Sunday, sources Al Arabiya and Al Hadath media outlets that Hezbollah’s central decision-making authority, the Shura Council, had chosen Safieddine to replace Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli strike on Beirut several days ago.

Safieddine has served as the head of Hezbollah’s Executive Council since 2001 and has generally been considered the “number two” within the group. The 60-year-old is also Nasrallah’s cousin and the son-in-law of the former commander of the Iranian Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani, who was killed by an American airstrike in Iraq in 2020.

Citing Israeli officials, the New York Times reported that Safieddine could soon be announced as Hezbollah’s new secretary-general, as he was one of the few remaining senior Hezbollah leaders not present at the site of the Israeli strike in Beirut. The outlet also described him as “a key player in the movement’s political and social work” who has long been seen as Nasrallah’s potential successor.

Hezbollah, however, scrambled to downplay rumors about Safieddine’s appointment, and was quoted by Al Manar as saying that the “news circulated by some media outlets about organizational procedures within the Hezbollah leadership after the martyrdom of… the Secretary-General is of no importance and cannot be relied upon.” The group stressed that reliable information can only come from official statements.

Israeli officials earlier said that the recent airstrikes on Hezbollah had practically wiped out the group’s military leadership, claiming that more than a dozen senior figures had been killed in the past several weeks. The death of Nasrallah was seen as a particularly severe blow to Hezbollah. As the group’s leader for more than 30 years, he had overseen its rise to power and earned a reputation as an arch-enemy of Israel.

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