Hassan Nasrallah gives a speech in Beirut on November 14, 2013. Nasrallah said in an interview published on April 7, 2014 that his Lebanese Shiite group was behind a blast that targeted Israeli troops on the border between the two countries last month. Anwar Amro / AFP Photo
Hassan Nasrallah gives a speech in Beirut on November 14, 2013. Nasrallah said in an interview published on April 7, 2014 that his Lebanese Shiite group was behind a blast that targeted Israeli troops on the border between the two countries last month. Anwar Amro / AFP Photo
Hassan Nasrallah gives a speech in Beirut on November 14, 2013. Nasrallah said in an interview published on April 7, 2014 that his Lebanese Shiite group was behind a blast that targeted Israeli troops on the border between the two countries last month. Anwar Amro / AFP Photo
Hassan Nasrallah gives a speech in Beirut on November 14, 2013. Nasrallah said in an interview published on April 7, 2014 that his Lebanese Shiite group was behind a blast that targeted Israeli troops

Hizbollah leader says Assad not in danger of being overthrown


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BEIRUT // Syrian President Bashar Al Assad will stand for re-election this year and no longer faces a threat of being overthrown, the head of his ally Hizbollah said in an interview published on Monday.

Hizbollah Secretary-General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, whose fighters have been supporting Mr Al Assad inside Syria, also said that after three years of conflict the danger of the country fragmenting was receding.

Mr Al Assad has lost control of large swathes of northern and eastern Syria to Syrian Islamist rebels and foreign Islamist militants. But his forces, backed by Hizbollah, Iraqi Shiite Muslim fighters and Iranian military commanders, have driven rebels back from around Damascus and secured most of central Syria.

“In my estimation, the phase of overthrowing the regime and overthrowing the state is over,” Mr Nasrallah told Al Safir newspaper, adding that he believed Mr Al Assad would put himself forward for a third presidential term in a vote due by July.

“It’s natural that he nominates himself, and I believe that will happen,” Mr Nasrallah said of the planned vote expected to take place despite continuing conflict and massive displacement within Syria. Assad’s international foes have said the poll would be a “parody of democracy”.

Rebels “cannot overthrow the regime (but) they can wage a war of attrition,” Mr Nasrallah said. “The real danger was, and still is to a certain extent, the end of Syria, its fragmentation. The danger was real and serious ... I think we have passed the danger of fragmentation.”

More than 150,000 people have been killed in Syria’s civil war, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group. A third of those were pro-Assad forces, including 364 Hizbollah fighters, it said.

Mr Nasrallah dismissed rebel gains over the last two weeks in the coastal province of Latakia — a stronghold of Mr Al Assad’s minority Alawite faith where rebels have seized the Kasab border crossing — as little more than a distraction.

“We can’t call what is happening in Latakia and Kasab a big battle ... it’s a limited operation,” he said, adding that talk of a big rebel offensive in the southern province of Deraa on the Jordanian border had also been overstated.

As the military threat against Mr Al Assad eased, so too would the political pressure “starting with Saudi Arabia and Qatar”, Mr Nasrallah said, pointing to two Gulf Arab states who have backed the rebels.

“I’m not saying they have changed their positions, but the strength of their stances, the level of their intervention and the hopes that they had, have changed a lot,” he said — in contrast to what he described as the unflinching support Mr Al Assad enjoyed from his own allies.

Shiite Hizbollah’s intervention in Syria, alongside the flow of Sunni fighters and weapons from Lebanon to support the rebels, has fuelled sectarian tensions inside Lebanon.

Radical Sunni groups have claimed responsibility for car bombs which targeted the southern Beirut suburbs where Hizbollah holds sway, and rockets have also struck Shiite and Sunni towns in the Bekaa Valley.

Lebanese Sunni politicians have criticised Hizbollah, which was set up three decades ago to fight Israeli occupation forces in the south of the country, for wading into an Arab conflict.

But Mr Nasrallah denied that his group’s military role in Syria was losing it popularity, saying its campaign against Syrian rebels near the Lebanese border was helping reduce the risk of bombings inside Lebanon.

Even some members of Lebanon’s anti-Hizbollah March 14 coalition tacitly supported the group’s actions, he said.

“There is a strong popular mood which supports Hezbollah’s intervention in Syria. Many Lebanese, even within March 14, deep down they believe and accept that intervention in Syria protects Lebanon from these terrorist groups.”

Mr Nasrallah also said Hizbollah was responsible for a bombing of an Israeli border patrol in March, saying the attack was in response to an Israeli air raid against a Hizbollah target on the Syrian-Lebanese border a month earlier.

“The Shebaa Farms bomb ... was the work of the resistance, the work of Hizbollah,” he said. “The is not the (full) response, but part of the response to the Israeli raid.”

He appeared to be referring to a March 14 incident when Israel’s military said an explosive device was detonated against Israeli soldiers patrolling the border with Lebanon. Israel shot six mortars into southern Lebanon in response, but no one was wounded on either side, security and military sources said.

* Reuters

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The government has taken an increasingly tough line against companies that fail to pay employees on time. Three years ago, the Cabinet passed a decree allowing the government to halt the granting of work permits to companies with wage backlogs.

The new measures passed by the Cabinet in 2016 were an update to the Wage Protection System, which is in place to track whether a company pays its employees on time or not.

If wages are 10 days late, the new measures kick in and the company is alerted it is in breach of labour rules. If wages remain unpaid for a total of 16 days, the authorities can cancel work permits, effectively shutting off operations. Fines of up to Dh5,000 per unpaid employee follow after 60 days.

Despite those measures, late payments remain an issue, particularly in the construction sector. Smaller contractors, such as electrical, plumbing and fit-out businesses, often blame the bigger companies that hire them for wages being late.

The authorities have urged employees to report their companies at the labour ministry or Tawafuq service centres — there are 15 in Abu Dhabi.

TOUCH RULES

Touch is derived from rugby league. Teams consist of up to 14 players with a maximum of six on the field at any time.

Teams can make as many substitutions as they want during the 40 minute matches.

Similar to rugby league, the attacking team has six attempts - or touches - before possession changes over.

A touch is any contact between the player with the ball and a defender, and must be with minimum force.

After a touch the player performs a “roll-ball” - similar to the play-the-ball in league - stepping over or rolling the ball between the feet.

At the roll-ball, the defenders have to retreat a minimum of five metres.

A touchdown is scored when an attacking player places the ball on or over the score-line.