“Today, the Islamic world and all free people fill the pure bodies of Hasan Nasrara and Seyed Hashem Safidin in their hands in an atmosphere of sorrow and glory. Not only the leaders, but also the renewal of their loyalty to the paths, thoughts and ideals in which they died,” Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi wrote in commemoration of the leaders of Hezbollah martyrs who will be buried in Beirut today. It’s there.
The city of Lebanon and Islamic worlds witnessed a flood of roaring sounds of those who, with tears but strong will, view these two leaders’ martials as the end of the road, but as a new point of continuation of the struggle I’m doing it. Repression and occupation, Araguchi said.
“Their bodies are resting, but their schools are still alive and will continue to make the path of resistance clear in the minds of millions of free people,” he added.
In an age where many leaders in the Arab and Islamic world succumbed to external pressure, Seyed Hassan Nasrara transformed resistance schools into a regional-level strategic equation, the Iranian foreign minister said.
MNA/