A Lebanese group
loyal to al-Qaeda vowed Tuesday to keep up its attacks against Iran, Hezbollah
and Israel, less than a fortnight after the death of its leader, Majid
al-Majid.
The Saudi-born Majid, which claimed responsibility for
a November attack on the Iranian embassy in Beirut, died after his arrest by
Lebanese authorities.
"His project will continue, God willing, in
striking Iran, its party (Hezbollah) and the aggressor Jews (Israel), and in
defending oppressed Sunnis everywhere," the Abdallah Azzam Brigades said
in an online statement.
The statement also lashed out against Lebanon for
"arbitrarily detaining" Islamists, and said Lebanese miliary
intelligence was under the control of "Iran's party," a reference to
Shiite group Hezbollah.
It criticized "attacks against Sunnis
orchestrated by Iran's party, which controls Lebanon's military intelligence
and manipulates it at will."
It also said Iran "manipulates all Lebanese state
institutions to protect both its interests and those of its Baathist ally in
Syria," a reference to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Majid died from poor health on January 4, days after
he was arrested, and his body was sent back to Saudi Arabia.
The November attack on the Iranian embassy in
Hezbollah's southern Beirut stronghold killed 25 people.
It came as tensions rose in Lebanon over the role of
the Iran-backed Hezbollah in neighbouring Syria's civil war.
Hezbollah has sent fighters to support Assad against
the Sunni-dominated rebels, who are backed by most Lebanese Sunnis.
Brigades member Sirajeddin Zreikat had already
threatened more attacks in Lebanon until Hezbollah ends its intervention.
In 2009, Lebanon handed Majid a life sentence in
absentia after convicting him of membership of another Al-Qaeda-inspired group,
Fatah al-Islam.
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