Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah emerges from hiding in last Friday to save his first major speech in a few years later, in his stronghold of southern Beirut against the Israeli-Palestinian conflict resolution support rallies.
"Israel is all the people in the region, including Lebanon danger, and remove it is a Lebanese national interests," Nasrallah told hundreds of supporters in his half-hour speech.
Charismatic Shi'ite cleric, mainly living in the shadows, afraid of assassination because Hezbollah and Israel play an uncertain month-long war in 2006.
His last major speech, post-conflict month, when he announced the victory in front of thousands of supporters. Since then, his occasional and brief public appearances - most recently in September last year - but there is no lengthy public addresses.
The most prominent Lebanese factions fighting the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon Hezbollah appeared in the 1980s, but in recent months has lent its military support to the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's anti-government armed confrontation.
The militant group al-Assad's forces to help recapture the Syrian border town of mainly Sunni Muslim insurgents in Lebanon, most of them Sunni support for the anti-Assad rebels substantial upgrade of sectarian tension, intervention.
Nasrallah said Hezbollah's enemies, including the United States, Israel and Britain, trying to use alienate their roles marginalized Shia and other areas in the Israeli - Palestinian conflict and political tensions.
"We want every enemy, every one friend said ... our world will not abandon Shiite Palestine, Palestinians in the Holy Land of Palestine," Nasrallah said, loud cheering support.
Security intensified Nasrallah spoke at the southern suburbs of Beirut, gunmen stationed at the intersection, resulting in the hall, where he delivered his address. Buses parked across the street, to prevent access to all but pedestrians.
Preventive measures are not an academic. A huge car bomb struck a month ago Bayrou, DC, two blocks from Nasrallah said, wounding 53 people.
Nasrallah said on the occasion of Jerusalem Day, marking an annual tradition established by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the late ruler of Iran and the last Friday of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan
Nasrallah said: "Some people might think that the elimination of the Palestinians against Israel's interest." "Yes, this is a Palestinian interest, but only because it is in the interests of the Islamic world, which is in the interests of the entire Arab world, which is in the region of each country's national interests."
Other News:
Hezbollah leader slams Israel in rare public speech
HSBC bank says 1st half profits at $10.2 billion
As Zimbabwe counts ballots, police warn against leaked election results
World stocks rise on hopes of more upbeat US data
Will fast-food protests spur higher minimum wage?
Bank of England readies guidance push, under wraps for now
After Snowden, no business as usual for U.S. and Russia
Planemakers rein in new jets to chase regional growth