Hezbollah launches series of attacks after Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon

Hezbollah launches series of attacks after Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon
Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts a rocket launched to Israel from Lebanon near the Israel-Lebanon border, amid ongoing cross border hostilities. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 02 June 2024
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Hezbollah launches series of attacks after Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon

Hezbollah launches series of attacks after Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon
  • Border villages hit by Israeli drone strikes
  • Hezbollah shoots down Hermes 900 drone
  • Israeli attacks kill Hezbollah member

BEIRUT: Hezbollah launched a series of attacks on Israeli military positions on Saturday following what local media reported as an escalation in Israeli strikes on Friday night.

Israeli warplanes and drones launched a series of raids on villages and towns in southern Lebanon, to which Hezbollah responded by firing dozens of rockets.

A building in Adloun, Sidon District, was destroyed during one raid, resulting in the death of a woman named Amal Abboud and injuries to four others. In Ain Qana, another strike led to the death of Hezbollah member Ahmed Taboush.

Hezbollah said it had shot down an Israeli drone over southern Lebanon hours later.

Israel confirmed a military drone was hit by a surface-to-air missile, causing it to crash in a village in southern Lebanon.

This is the fourth time that Hezbollah has downed an Israeli drone in southern Lebanon, but the Israeli Air Force said it would continue its operations in Lebanese airspace despite the losses.

The clashes between Hezbollah and the Israeli army appear to have shifted from the ground to the skies. Residents in border areas reported experiencing “one of the fiercest nights of attacks since clashes began on October 8 last year” on Friday, with Israel conducting airstrikes on multiple towns and villages.

The escalation coincided with a speech from Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, in which he stated that southern Lebanon is “a pressing, influential, and powerful front in pressurizing the Israelis, as confirmed by its officials.”

Israeli media said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had instructed Israeli forces to expand the level of strikes in Lebanon.

Hezbollah confirmed in a statement on Saturday that they had shot down an Israeli drone.

“After monitoring and closely following the Israeli drones that carry out assassinations and attack safe homes, we targeted a Hermes 900 drone with appropriate weapons over Lebanese territory and shot it down,” Hezbollah said. The drone reportedly fell in the Deir Kifa area.

Israeli drones continued to target vehicles around the border area. A drone bombed a car in the town of Markaba, and another targeted a motorcycle in the town of Majdal Selem in the Marjayoun district. Lebanese emergency services transported two casualties from the site of the strike.

One drone struck close to the mosque in the town of Barin in the western sector, while another fired three missiles at a car in Harouf town, causing casualties.

Hezbollah said that it had launched a successful missile strike on Israel’s Al-Baghdadi military site. 

Additionally, Hezbollah said it had carried out “an aerial attack using assault drones on the recently established position of the armored group north of the Yiftah Barracks, aiming at the enemy’s officers and soldiers’ locations, resulting in confirmed casualties among them.”

Sirens sounded in the Yiftah and Hermon regions in Upper Galilee, and Israel’s Channel 12 said that “a rocket landed in the vicinity of the area in Upper Galilee, but no casualties were reported.”

The Israeli army confirmed that “a major fire broke out inside the headquarters of the 769th Eastern Brigade (Camp Jibur) in the Kiryat Shmona border settlement after a heavy missile fired by Hezbollah from Lebanon fell.”

Hezbollah confirmed that it had targeted “the headquarters of the 769th Brigade in the Kiryat Shmona barracks with heavy Burkan missiles.”

The missiles struck the headquarters directly, resulting in a fire and some damage, Hezbollah said. The Kiryat Shmona municipality acknowledged that Hezbollah’s bombing of the settlement “caused severe damage to infrastructure, property, and vehicles.”

The municipality called on residents of Kiryat Shmona to remain near protected areas.

Israeli Army Radio reported that “two buildings, one of them military, were hit by missile strikes from Lebanon on Kiryat Shmona.”


Hezbollah targets Israeli mountain base in ‘largest’ air attack

Hezbollah targets Israeli mountain base in ‘largest’ air attack
Updated 55 min 5 sec ago
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Hezbollah targets Israeli mountain base in ‘largest’ air attack

Hezbollah targets Israeli mountain base in ‘largest’ air attack
  • Hezbollah, Iran-backed Hamas ally, has traded almost daily fire with Israeli forces since Palestinian militant group’s Oct. 7 attack

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement said on Sunday it launched its “largest” air operation, sending explosive drones at a mountaintop Israeli military intelligence base in the annexed Golan Heights.
It is the latest incident among escalating cross-border exchanges of fire that have triggered global alarm.
Hezbollah, an Iran-backed Hamas ally, has traded almost daily fire with Israeli forces since the Palestinian militant group’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel triggered war in the Gaza Strip.
Announcing “the largest operation” carried out by its aerial forces, Hezbollah said in a statement that its fighters sent “multiple, successive squadrons of drones to target the reconnaissance center” on Mount Hermon.
The Israeli military said an explosive drone “fell in an open area in the Mount Hermon area” but there were “no injuries.”
Attacks as well as rhetoric have escalated in recent weeks, spurring fears of an all-out conflict between Israel and Hezbollah which last went to war in 2006.
The Lebanese movement said the drone attack was part of its “response” to the killing of an operative in a strike Saturday deep into east Lebanon around 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the border.
The Mount Hermon attack targeted intelligence systems, “destroying them and starting a major fire,” Hezbollah said.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant visited troops on Mount Hermon earlier on Sunday, his office said.
In two additional statements, the military said its air defenses “successfully intercepted” several “aerial targets” that crossed from Lebanon after sirens sounded in the Golan Heights area.
Israel seized the Golan Heights from Syria in 1967 and later annexed it in a move largely unrecognized by the international community.
The Israeli strike on Saturday killed “a key operative in Hezbollah’s Aerial Defense Unit,” the military has said.
Throughout Sunday, Hezbollah announced four more attacks on Israeli military sites across the border with barrages of rockets as well as some guided missiles. Israeli authorities reported four wounded.
Gallant, in a video from Mount Hermon, said that “even if there is a ceasefire” in Gaza, “we will continue fighting and doing everything necessary to bring about the desired result” in the campaign against Hezbollah.
The cross-border violence has killed at least 497 people in Lebanon, mostly fighters but also including 95 civilians, according to an AFP tally.
On the Israeli side, at least 16 soldiers and 11 civilians have been killed, according to the authorities.
Tens of thousands of residents have been displaced from the border areas in both southern Lebanon and northern Israel.


UK’s Starmer uges ‘caution’ on Israel-Lebanon border

Smoke billows from a site targeted by Israeli shelling in the southern Lebanese village of Dhayra on July 4, 2024. (AFP)
Smoke billows from a site targeted by Israeli shelling in the southern Lebanese village of Dhayra on July 4, 2024. (AFP)
Updated 07 July 2024
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UK’s Starmer uges ‘caution’ on Israel-Lebanon border

Smoke billows from a site targeted by Israeli shelling in the southern Lebanese village of Dhayra on July 4, 2024. (AFP)
  • Starmer told Abbas that his “longstanding policy on recognition to contribute to a peace process had not changed, and it was the undeniable right of Palestinians”

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Sunday called on all sides to exercise “caution” on the border between Israel and Lebanon, in his first telephone conversation since he was elected with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Starmer told his counterpart the “situation on the northern border of Israel was very concerning, and it was crucial all parties acted with caution,” a spokesperson for his 10 Downing Street office said.
Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement on Sunday fired another 20 rockets at northern Israel, leaving one person injured there, the latest cross-border attacks launched in solidarity with Hamas.
Hezbollah has traded near daily fire with the Israeli army across Lebanon’s southern border since its Palestinian ally Hamas attacked Israel last year, triggering the war in Gaza.
Discussing the conflict, the prime minister reiterated his condolences for the mass loss of life during the October 7 attacks, the spokesperson said.
“He then set out the clear and urgent need for a ceasefire, the return of hostages and an immediate increase in the volume of humanitarian aid reaching civilians.”
In his conversation with Netanyahu, Starmer added that it was also “important to ensure the long-term conditions for a two-state solution were in place, including ensuring the Palestinian Authority had the financial means to operate effectively.”
Efforts toward a truce are continuing with US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators hoping to halt the worst-ever Gaza war, which has caused mass civilian casualties and devastated the coastal territory.
The spokesperson said the prime minister also spoke by phone to Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.
Starmer told Abbas that his “longstanding policy on recognition to contribute to a peace process had not changed, and it was the undeniable right of Palestinians.”
The October 7 attack on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
The militants also seized 251 hostages, 116 of whom remain in Gaza, including 42 the military says are dead.
In response, Israel’s military offensive has killed at least 38,153 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-ruled territory.


Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal

Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal
Updated 07 July 2024
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Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal

Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal
  • Reports indicated that Hamas had provisionally approved a new phased deal proposal
  • But Mossad official David Barnea reportedly presented mediators with new conditions

LONDON: Israel has been accused of trying to sabotage a US-backed ceasefire proposal by adding new conditions after initially accepting the plan, Israeli news outlets reported on Sunday.

Recent days had seen an increase in optimism for a Gaza ceasefire, with reports indicating that Hamas had provisionally approved a new phased deal proposal.

Egyptian officials and Hamas representatives noted that the Palestinian militant group conceded a key demand for Israel to commit to a permanent end to the war before any cessation of hostilities, Reuters and the Associated Press reported.

Two Hamas officials told Reuters they were now waiting for Israel’s response.

However, David Barnea, the chief of the Mossad foreign intelligence service, who was sent over the weekend to Qatar where talks are being held, reportedly presented mediators with a list of new conditions.

Haaretz, citing a source familiar with the matter, reported that these new Israeli demands could delay negotiations by “at least three weeks” and it was uncertain if Hamas would agree to them.

“Hamas has already agreed to the latest position presented by Israel,” the source told Haaretz. “But in Friday’s meeting, Israel presented some new points it demands that Hamas accept.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under fire from opposition parties, the media, and families of Israeli hostages, who accuse him of sabotaging efforts to reach a ceasefire and secure the hostages’ release for his political gain.

As a potential agreement nears, Netanyahu has shown a pattern of pulling back from hostage negotiations. In recent months, he has been accused of hindering progress toward ending the war through public statements, covert communications, or by restricting the negotiating team’s authority.

Over 38,000 Palestinians, the majority of whom are women and children, have been killed in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, as the war marks its ninth month.


Yemeni parties fail to reach prisoner exchange deal in Muscat

The UN Yemen envoy, Hans Grundberg, announced the end of the dialogue in Muscat. (File/AFP)
The UN Yemen envoy, Hans Grundberg, announced the end of the dialogue in Muscat. (File/AFP)
Updated 07 July 2024
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Yemeni parties fail to reach prisoner exchange deal in Muscat

The UN Yemen envoy, Hans Grundberg, announced the end of the dialogue in Muscat. (File/AFP)
  • Officials from both sides declared on Saturday that the UN-brokered discussions in Muscat had ended without reaching an agreement on a new prisoner arrangement
  • Houthis ransack home of Yemen central bank chief in Sanaa, says state media

AL-MUKALLA: Yemen’s internationally recognized government and the Houthis have failed to strike a fresh prisoner exchange deal, crushing Yemeni families’ hopes of seeing their detained relatives released.

Officials from the two sides declared on Saturday night that the UN-brokered discussions in Muscat had ended without reaching an agreement on a new prisoner arrangement.

The UN Yemen envoy, Hans Grundberg, announced the end of the dialogue in Muscat, saying that the talks achieved “a significant breakthrough” when the Yemeni government and the Houthis agreed to release prominent politician Mohammed Qahtan, a point of contention between the two sides.

The government and militia agreed to meet again to approve the names of detainees set for release.

“Thousands of Yemenis are waiting to be reunited with their loved ones. Despite the positive progress, much more needs to be done, and faster, to provide relief to the suffering families,” Grundberg said in a statement.

Despite accusing the Houthis of attempting to derail the prisoner swap talks, Majed Fadhail, a spokesperson for the government delegation, also spoke of “some breakthroughs” in issues concerning war prisoners and forcibly disappeared people.

The government had agreed with the Houthis to return for a “supplementary” round of talks in two months, he added.

Last week, the Yemeni government and Grundberg expressed confidence about the negotiation progress after the Houthis agreed to exchange Qahtan for 50 of their inmates, removing a key impediment to the discussions.

In a post on X, Abdulkader Al-Murtada, head of the Houthi National Committee for Prisoners’ Affairs, said that during the discussions, the militia settled its dispute with the Yemeni government over the release of Qahtan and swapped prospective names of prisoners for release, citing “time constraints” as the reason for the termination of the talks.

The latest round of UN-sponsored negotiations between the Yemeni government and the Houthis started last Sunday in the hopes of reaching a fresh jail exchange agreement to ease the suffering of hundreds of war prisoners and abducted civilians.

It comes as the Yemeni government accused the Houthis of assaulting the Sanaa home of Ahmed Ahmed Ghaleb, the governor of Yemen’s central bank in Aden.

Central bank chief's home ransacked

According to the official news agency on Saturday, armed Houthi fighters stormed Ghaleb’s residence in Sanaa and removed those inside, apparently in response to the governor’s recent actions against Sanaa’s banking institutions.

Ghaleb recently sanctioned numerous banks for refusing to move their offices from Houthi-held Sanaa to government-controlled Aden.

He also ordered the removal of banknotes printed before 2016 that are extensively used in Houthi territory.

Since seizing power in Yemen more than a decade ago, the Houthis have seized the homes and other assets of hundreds of Yemeni politicians, journalists, human rights advocates, military and security personnel, attorneys and others who have challenged their harsh policies.

Meanwhile, Yemen’s Ministry of Endowments and Guidance said on Saturday that all stranded Yemeni pilgrims have returned home after the Houthis permitted a Yemenia Airways jet to fly them from Jeddah to Sanaa.

Hundreds of Yemeni pilgrims were trapped in Saudi Arabia when the Houthis seized three Yemenia aircraft at Sanaa airport and prevented them from flying to Saudi Arabia to bring back pilgrims.

A Yemeni government official told Arab News that the standoff with the Houthis over the capture of Yemenia planes has not ended and that the Houthis have once again seized the Yemenia plane that carried pilgrims and have refused all mediations to release the aircraft.

The Houthis claim they will administer Yemenia Airways, repair the aircraft and reorganize flights from Yemeni airports, including those held by the government.

The Yemeni government accused the Houthis of “hijacking” the flights and compounding the agony of Yemenis who are left unable to travel as a result of the aircraft seizures.


Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal

Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal
Updated 07 July 2024
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Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal

Israel accused of sabotaging Gaza ceasefire proposal
  • New Israeli demands could delay negotiations by “at least three weeks”

LONDON: Israel has been accused of trying to sabotage a US-backed ceasefire proposal by adding new conditions after initially accepting the plan, Israeli news outlets reported on Sunday.

Recent days had seen an increase in optimism for a Gaza ceasefire, with reports indicating that Hamas had provisionally approved a new phased deal proposal.

Egyptian officials and Hamas representatives noted that the Palestinian militant group conceded a key demand for Israel to commit to a permanent end to the war before any cessation of hostilities, Reuters and the Associated Press reported.

Two Hamas officials told Reuters they were now waiting for Israel’s response.

However, David Barnea, the chief of the Mossad foreign intelligence service, who was sent over the weekend to Qatar where talks are being held, reportedly presented mediators with a list of new conditions.

Haaretz, citing a source familiar with the matter, reported that these new Israeli demands could delay negotiations by “at least three weeks” and it was uncertain if Hamas would agree to them.

“Hamas has already agreed to the latest position presented by Israel,” the source told Haaretz. “But in Friday’s meeting, Israel presented some new points it demands that Hamas accept.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under fire from opposition parties, the media, and families of Israeli hostages, who accuse him of sabotaging efforts to reach a ceasefire and secure the hostages’ release for his political gain.

As a potential agreement nears, Netanyahu has shown a pattern of pulling back from hostage negotiations. In recent months, he has been accused of hindering progress toward ending the war through public statements, covert communications, or by restricting the negotiating team’s authority.

Over 38,000 Palestinians, the majority of whom are women and children, have been killed in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, as the war marks its ninth month.