After firing dozens of Lebanese Saudi Arabia blacklists firms, people linked to Hezbollah

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A parade by the Iranian backed Lebanese  Shiite  Hezbollah militia.
A parade by the Iranian backed Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah militia.
Saudi Arabia took another drastic action today when it blacklisted several companies and individuals over their alleged links to the Iranian-backed Hezbollah Shiite militant group

The Saudi authorities designated four companies and three individuals as “terrorists.”

The Interior Ministry identified the firms as Vatech SARL, Le-Hua Electronic Field Co. Limited, Aero Skyone Co. Limited and Labico SAL Offshore.

It said in a statement that the three men are Fadi Hussein Sarhan, Adel Mohammed Sherri and Ali Hussein Zoaiter.

All of them were blacklisted by the U.S. Treasury in November last year.

“Hezbollah spreads chaos and instability, launches terrorist attacks and practices criminal activities across the world,” said the ministry.

This development comes a day after dozens of Lebanese employees were fired from their jobs in Saudi Arabia , amid an unprecedented rift in the Saudi-Lebanese relations.

These development are reportedly linked to the series of measures that Riyadh has taken in recent days in response to verbal attacks from Hezbollah over the wars in Syria and Yemen as well as recent diplomatic stances by Lebanon’s foreign ministry.

The developments come a week after the Saudi foreign ministry announced last Friday that the kingdom was suspending around $4 billion in military aid to the Lebanese army and security forces.

Riyadh was reportedly also making “a comprehensive review of its relations with the Lebanese republic,” an unnamed official said, cited by the Saudi Press Agency.

In announcing the Saudi aid suspension on Friday, an official said the kingdom had noticed “hostile Lebanese positions resulting from the stranglehold of Hezbollah on the state.”

The Saudi official also said that Lebanon had not joined condemnation of the attacks on Riyadh’s diplomatic missions in Iran, neither at the Arab League nor at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has repeatedly accused Riyadh of backing terrorist groups in Yemen, Iraq and Syria .

On Tuesday, the kingdom also issued a travel advisory advising its citizens against travel to Lebanon and urged those already in the country to leave it, citing “safety” concerns. The rest of the GCC countries except for Oman followed suit on Tuesday and Wednesday, issuing similar travel warnings.

On Wednesday a Saudi military spokesman urged Lebanon to stop the Shiite Lebanese movement Hezbollah from exporting its “mercenaries” to Yemen and Syria, Al Arabiya News Channel reported.

In anticipation of this development Democratic Gathering Parliamentary block leader MP Walid Jumblatt warned on Wednesday that Lebanese expatriates were in danger over what he termed as “irresponsible” remarks made by some officials.

“By irresponsible statements, (we are) endangering Lebanese abroad,” the Progressive Socialist Party chief said on Twitter.

About 400,000 to 500, 000 Lebanese work in the Gulf and mostly in Saudi Arabia . 70 % of the remittances come from expatriates living the Gulf states.

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