BEIRUT (Reuters) - The Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah is marshalling its deep resources in the fight against coronavirus, using a corps of volunteers, doctors and facilities to carve out a prominent role in the crisis-riven state’s response.

Volunteers from Hezbollah's Islamic health unit stand in preparation to sanitize streets as precaution against the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), during a media tour organised by Hezbollah officials in Beirut's southern suburb, Lebanon March 31, 2020. Picture taken March 31, 2020. REUTERS/Aziz Taher

The campaign is part of wider efforts by Lebanon’s sectarian parties that are scrambling to show they can help in this emergency.

Analysts say the political elite sees an opportunity to restore community standing that was tarnished six months ago during nationwide protests against corrupt governance and crippling economic troubles.

But the outsized effort by the Iran-backed Hezbollah, a heavily armed Shi’ite Islamist group designated a terrorist organization by the United States and the target of U.S. sanctions, stands heads above the rest in its campaign.

On a media tour in Beirut given by Hezbollah officials on Tuesday the group rolled out one of two new testing centers, a fleet of ambulances - many equipped with ventilators - and an entire hospital re-purposed for coronavirus patients, just part of what it described as a nationwide response.

“The goal is to reduce the pressure on the ministry (of health), hospitals, and the state,” said Hezbollah official Hussein Fadlallah. “We have a volunteer team of over 25,000.”

Lebanon, a country of roughly six million ravaged by a financial crisis that has drained its hard currency and sunk the Lebanese pound, has recorded 463 coronavirus cases and 12 deaths.

Health officials warn that its healthcare system is ill-equipped to rein in an aggressive outbreak that could quickly draw down supplies decimated by the months-long dollar shortage.

“Hezbollah and the rest of the political establishment ... see the coronavirus crisis as an opportunity to provide services and present themselves as the parties protecting their communities,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, a fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center. “Hezbollah is in the lead.”

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A WAR FOOTING

Long described by its critics as “a state within a state” because of its powerful military force and provision of health and social services, Hezbollah has become more deeply involved in government affairs in recent years.

The Iran-funded group is a significant backer of the government of Prime Minister Hassan Diab, which took office in January, and picked the current and former ministers of health.

Though much of its plan for fighting coronavirus draws on its own hospitals and clinics, Hezbollah has said it will also deploy doctors to government hospitals as needed.

“The level of preparation is the same (as war) but the goals are different,” said Fadllalah.

Other parties - Sunni, Christian and Druze - have pulled together similar initiatives such as sanitizing public spaces, distributing food to the needy and awareness raising.

The Free Patriotic Movement, a Christian party, has procured rapid testing kits from China for use in mobile clinics it will run. Lebanon’s main Druze leader Walid Jumblatt has made donations to hospitals and his Progressive Socialist Party has organized quarantine areas if needed.

The Shi’ite Amal Movement, led by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, is involved in parts of Hezbollah’s campaign as well as its own. Berri ordered the government to pay arrears to municipal councils to help them cope with local outbreaks.

The Future Movement, a Sunni party led by former prime minister Saad al-Hariri, has distributed food packages.

Hezbollah’s measures include a call center, three quarantine centers with 170 beds and capacity to scale up to 1,000, and 64 “social committees” to monitor the needs of families hit by the economic fallout, Fadlallah said.