Kuwait has
expelled 11 Lebanese and three Iraqis suspected of belonging to
Hezbollah, a Kuwaiti newspaper reported on Monday, nearly three weeks
after the country joined other Gulf Arab states in designating the
Lebanese Shi'ite group a terrorist organization. Al-Qabas
cited a security source as saying the 14 people had been expelled at
the request of the state security service. The Interior Ministry was not
immediately available for comment. The
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) named Hezbollah, an Iranian-allied
Islamist political movement that is fighting for President Bashar
al-Assad in Syria's civil war, a terrorist group on March 2. The
GCC, which groups six Sunni-ruled states -- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the
United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Oman and Qatar -- had already imposed
sanctions on Hezbollah in 2013. Al-Qabas said
Kuwait's state security body had prepared a list of "unwanted" Lebanese
and Iraqis, including advisers to major companies, for deportation "in
the public interest". At the time of the
GCC decision, Secretary-General Abdullatif al-Zayani accused Hezbollah
of recruiting young men to carry out terrorist attacks in Gulf states,
smuggling in weapons and explosives, and inciting chaos, violence and
political unrest. Hezbollah called the GCC decision "reckless and hostile" and blamed it on Saudi Arabia.
Kuwait expels 14 accused of Hezbollah links: report
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