A German Bundestag member has called on the European Union to ban the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah following the devastating explosion in Beirut. Bijan Djir-Sarai, a foreign policy spokesman for the centre-right Free Democratic Party (FDP), has said Brussels needs to “face reality” especially amid the fallout from the August 4 explosion in Beirut’s port, which killed at least 177 people. "The explosion drew attention to the role of foreign, non-state actors within the fragile fabric of Lebanon," Mr Djir-Sarai wrote in the German newspaper <em>Die Welt</em>. “It is well known that both the port of Beirut and the airport are under the control of the Tehran-controlled Shiite Hezbollah militia. The Islamist organisation has a firm grip on the country,” he added. Germany banned all activity by Hezbollah on its soil and designated the group a terrorist organisation in April this year. The EU, however, has differentiated between Hezbollah’s military and political wings in its dealings with the group. In 2012 Brussels placed a ban on Hezbollah’s military activities after a suicide bombing that killed six people. The bloc did not impose sanctions on the group as a whole. Politicians and experts across Europe have insisted there is no distinction between Hezbollah’s political and military activities while others have expressed concerns that such a ban could harm diplomatic relations with the Lebanon. “It would be a mistake not to use this window of international attention and leave Lebanon to its fate, its failure” Mr Djir-Sarai, who grew up in Iran, wrote. “It is also now time to promote Hezbollah's classification as a terrorist organisation at EU level,” he added. Hezbollah has denied a role in the Beirut explosion. However, much public anger following the blast has been aimed at the Islamist group and Lebanon’s political elite. On Tuesday a special tribunal in the Netherlands established that a Hezbollah member was responsible for the 2005 killing of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri. However the court did not find evidence of Hezbollah leadership’s involvement.