Lebanese, Syrian ministers vow to improv­e economic ties ­



Lebanese and Syrian ministers pledged to­ boost economic ties on Wednesday, 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 Shi'ite 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 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 on 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 longstanding 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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