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Lebanese, Syrian Ministers Vow to Improve Economic Ties


Lebanese Minister of Industry Hussein Hajj Hassan is seen in Damascus, Syria, Aug. 16, 2017.
Lebanese Minister of Industry Hussein Hajj Hassan is seen in Damascus, Syria, Aug. 16, 2017.

Lebanese and Syrian ministers pledged Wednesday to boost economic ties. The announcement was part of a visit that has challenged the Lebanese state's policy of neutrality toward Syria's war.

Government ministers from Lebanon's Hezbollah and the Shiite Amal party arrived in Syria for a trade fair, a trip that has ignited a political row in Lebanon.

The Lebanese government has refused to sanction the visit as official business, but Industry Minister Hussein Hajj Hassan has insisted they will be there as government representatives.

Calls to normalize relations with Damascus are testing Lebanon's official policy of "dissociation," agreed upon in 2012. The policy has aimed to keep the deeply divided state out of regional conflicts such as Syria, even as Iran-backed Hezbollah got heavily involved there.

The Damascus International Fair is to open this week for the first time since the Syrian conflict began six years ago.

In a village at the Lebanese-Syrian border, Hajj Hassan, a Hezbollah member, said the Lebanese ministers would meet with Syrian officials.

"The historic Syrian-Lebanese ties ... will continue and we as Lebanese have every interest in them continuing," he said.

"We are reactivating the trade and economic ties between the two countries," he later told Reuters.

Hezbollah has sent thousands of its fighters to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government in the battle against Syrian rebel groups and militants.

Syria's economy minister said the visit marked "a chance for joint action, for reinforcing cooperation, whether it's in terms of investment or of trade."

In a speech Sunday, Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah pressed the Lebanese state to strengthen relations with Assad's government. Nasrallah said Lebanon needed its larger neighbor for its security interests, as well as agricultural, gas and oil exports.

Lebanon's Saudi-allied Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri has said any minister who goes to Syria does so in a personal capacity.

Samir Geagea, a leading Lebanese Christian politician and long-standing opponent of Hezbollah and Syrian influence in Lebanon, said the visit to Syria would "shake Lebanon's political stability and put Lebanon in the Iranian camp."

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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