Hezbollah fires rockets after Israeli strike on Lebanon

Two Lebanese men inspect a damaged vehicle following an Israeli strike along the road between Khardali and Marjeyoun, near the village of Deir Mimas, close to the southern Lebanese border with Israel on July 13, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border clashes between Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters. (AFP)
Two Lebanese men inspect a damaged vehicle following an Israeli strike along the road between Khardali and Marjeyoun, near the village of Deir Mimas, close to the southern Lebanese border with Israel on July 13, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border clashes between Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters. (AFP)
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Updated 14 July 2024
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Hezbollah fires rockets after Israeli strike on Lebanon

Hezbollah fires rockets after Israeli strike on Lebanon
  • Hezbollah had already launched multiple attacks against Israeli military positions along the border on Saturday

BEIRTU, Lebanon: Lebanon’s Hezbollah launched rockets at Israel on Saturday after an Israeli air strike that according to a Lebanese security source killed two civilians in the country’s south.
The Israeli military, whose forces have been trading regular cross-border fire with Hezbollah since early October, said its raid had targeted two operatives from the Iran-backed group.
The Shiite Muslim movement said it had retaliated by launching dozens of rockets at the border town of Kiryat Shmona, in Israel’s north.
The Israeli military said four soldiers were wounded including one “severely,” after air defenses intercepted most of the “approximately 15 launches... identified crossing from Lebanon.”
Israeli aircraft then “struck a Hezbollah field commander who was operating in the area of (Kfar) Tebnit in southern Lebanon,” the military added.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) reported multiple wounded in an Israeli drone strike on a vehicle near Kfar Tebnit.
Hezbollah had already launched multiple attacks against Israeli military positions along the border on Saturday.
The Lebanese security source, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media, said that “two civilians were filling up water from a roadside spring” in south Lebanon’s Deir Mimas area when they were killed in an “Israeli air strike.”
A source close to Hezbollah, also requesting anonymity, said one of the men was a member of the group and the father of a fighter who had been killed, while the second man was a member of Hezbollah ally the Amal movement.
The pair were “civilians, not fighters,” the source added.
The Israeli army said in a statement that “soldiers identified two Hezbollah terrorists preparing to launch projectiles toward Israeli territory in the area of Deir Mimas in southern Lebanon.”
“Shortly following the identification, the IAF (air force) struck the terrorists,” the statement added.
Hezbollah said it had launched rockets “in response to the aggressions by the Israeli enemy against the villages... and civilians in the south.”
Hezbollah has traded almost daily fire with Israeli forces in support of ally Hamas since the Palestinian militant group’s October 7 attack on Israel triggered war in the Gaza Strip.
The NNA said an “enemy drone” killed two men on Saturday in the same area, identifying one of them as a local council member for the Amal movement in the nearby village of Kfar Kila.
It said they were collecting water from the spring “to take it for livestock in Kfar Kila.”
The Amal movement released a statement saying one of its members, born in 1964, was killed.
In Lebanon, the cross-border violence since October has killed more than 500 people, mostly fighters but also including more than 90 civilians, according to an AFP tally.
On the Israeli side, at least 29 people have been killed, the majority of them soldiers, according to the authorities.
The violence, largely restricted to the border area, has raised fears of all-out conflict between the foes, which last went to war in the summer of 2006.
 

 


Yemen flood toll climbs to 60, thousands affected: UN

Yemen flood toll climbs to 60, thousands affected: UN
Updated 57 min 7 sec ago
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Yemen flood toll climbs to 60, thousands affected: UN

Yemen flood toll climbs to 60, thousands affected: UN
  • Yemen suffers from severe floods on a near-annual basis that are triggered by torrential rainfall, while climate change is increasing the intensity of precipitation

DUBAI: Flooding caused by torrential rainfall in war-torn Yemen has led to at least 60 deaths since July, with 13 others still missing and a total of 268,000 people affected, the United Nations said Monday.
Yemen, already grappling with an almost decade-long war, suffers from severe floods on a near-annual basis that are triggered by torrential rainfall, while climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of precipitation.
Since July, flash floods have caused 36 deaths in Hodeida province, nine in Ibb, eight in Marib and seven in Taiz, the UN humanitarian agency OCHA said in a report released on Monday.
“Public infrastructure, including schools, roads, and health facilities, have been affected. Livelihoods that were already hanging by a thread have been swept away,” OCHA said.
At least 600 people were injured due to flooding in Hodeida and Marib alone, it said, adding that a total of 13 people were still missing in Hodeida and Taiz.
It added that a total of 38,285 families — nearly 268,000 people — have been affected, saying that “severe weather is expected to persist into September, with additional alerts for heavy rainfall.”
The University of Notre Dame’s Global Adaptation Initiative ranks Yemen as one of the region’s most climate-vulnerable countries.
In recent years, it has experienced an increase in the frequency and intensity of rainfall due to climate change, stimulated by atmospheric circulation in the Indian Ocean, according to a 2023 report by the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Norwegian Red Cross.
The country also suffered heavy flooding in 2019, 2020 and 2021, the report said.
Last week, the UN warned that $4.9 million was urgently needed to scale up the emergency response to Yemen’s extreme weather conditions.


Libya’s powerful central bank governor is fired as country’s deep divisions persist

Libya’s powerful central bank governor is fired as country’s deep divisions persist
Updated 19 August 2024
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Libya’s powerful central bank governor is fired as country’s deep divisions persist

Libya’s powerful central bank governor is fired as country’s deep divisions persist
  • Central Bank is the repository for billions of dollars annually in oil revenue as well as foreign reserves

CAIRO: Libya’s presidential council has fired the powerful central bank governor in an abrupt move that is likely to further fuel tensions in the deeply divided North African country.
The council named Mohamed Abdul Salam Al-Shukri as the new governor for the Central Bank of Libya, replacing Sadiq Al-Kabir, according to a decree issued late Sunday. Al-Shukri is an economist and former deputy governor of the central bank.
The Tripoli-based council is allied with the government of Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah in western Libya.
There was no immediate comment from Al-Kabir, who led the central bank since October 2011 — the year that Libya was plunged into chaos after a NATO-backed uprising toppled longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi.
The oil-rich country has been split between a UN-supported government in the capital, Tripoli, and rival authorities based in the east. Each side has been backed by armed groups and foreign governments.
The Central Bank is the repository for billions of dollars annually in oil revenue as well as foreign reserves. In 2014, it splintered along the country’s political fault lines.
The bank’s internationally recognized headquarters remain in Tripoli, while an eastern branch allied with military commander Khalifa Haftar was set up in Benghazi.
The east-based House of Representatives earlier appointed Al-Shukri as a central bank governor in a decision that was not implemented, and the parliament rescinded it this month.


UN says malnutrition crisis worsening in Middle East, North Africa

UN says malnutrition crisis worsening in Middle East, North Africa
Updated 19 August 2024
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UN says malnutrition crisis worsening in Middle East, North Africa

UN says malnutrition crisis worsening in Middle East, North Africa
  • UNICEF: At least 77 million in the MENA region have some form of malnutrition
  • Conflict, economic turmoil and climate change had hampered efforts last year to reduce hunger

AMMAN: The United Nations warned Monday of a “deepening crisis” of malnutrition in the Middle East and North Africa affecting a third of children.
“At least 77 million — or 1 in 3 — children in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have some form of malnutrition,” the UN children’s agency UNICEF said in a statement.
It said 55 million children across the 20 countries assessed are overweight or obese, which UNICEF considers a type of malnutrition.
A further 24 million children suffer from undernutrition, including stunting, wasting and thinness, it said.
“The deepening crisis of malnutrition in the region is being driven by what and how children are fed, poor access to nutritious foods, clean water, medical care and other essential services, and the proliferation of cheap, unhealthy poor foods high in salt, sugar and fat,” it added.
This takes place amid “ongoing conflicts, political instability, climatic shocks, and rising food prices that together, deny children their right to nutritious food and limit humanitarian access to vulnerable communities.”
Only a third of young children are being provided with nutritious foods, said UNICEF regional director Adele Khodr.
“This is a shocking statistic in 2024 and risks becoming even worse as conflicts, crises and other challenges in our region persist,” she said.
UNICEF urged governments to focus on nutrition in their planning and policy.
UN agencies said last month that conflict, economic turmoil and climate change had hampered efforts last year to reduce hunger, affecting about nine percent of the world’s population.
In a report, they estimated that about 733 million people experienced hunger in 2023, a figure that has remained largely the same for three years after a sharp rise following the COVID-19 pandemic.
Moderate and severe food insecurity, which forces people to sometimes skip meals, affected 2.33 billion people last year — about 29 percent of the world’s population, they said.


Hamas, Islamic Jihad claim responsibility for bomb blast in Tel Aviv

Hamas, Islamic Jihad claim responsibility for bomb blast in Tel Aviv
Updated 19 August 2024
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Hamas, Islamic Jihad claim responsibility for bomb blast in Tel Aviv

Hamas, Islamic Jihad claim responsibility for bomb blast in Tel Aviv
  • A man who was carrying the bomb was killed and a passerby was injured

TEL AVIV: The armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility on Monday for a bomb blast near a synagogue in Tel Aviv that Israeli police and the Shin Bet intelligence agency described as a terrorist attack.
A man who was carrying the bomb was killed and a passerby was injured in the incident late on Sunday, according to police at the scene.
In their statement the Brigades added that their “martyrdom operations” inside Israel would return to the forefront as long as the “occupation’s massacres and assassination policy continue” — an allusion to Israel’s offensive in Gaza and the July 31 killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.
Israel has neither claimed nor denied responsibility for Haniyeh’s death in the Iranian capital.
The war in Gaza began on Oct. 7 last year when Hamas gunmen stormed across the border into Israeli communities, killing around 1,200 people and abducting about 250 hostages according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s military campaign has since levelled wide swathes of the Gaza Strip and killed at least 40,000 people, according to the enclave’s health authorities.
Sunday’s explosion in Tel Aviv came about an hour after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Tel Aviv to push for a ceasefire in Gaza to end the 10-month-old war between Israel and Hamas.
There has been increased urgency to reach a ceasefire deal amid fears of an escalation across the wider region. Iran has threatened to retaliate against Israel after the assassination of Haniyeh.


Kuwait refers former minister to public prosecution over corruption charges

Kuwait refers former minister to public prosecution over corruption charges
Updated 19 August 2024
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Kuwait refers former minister to public prosecution over corruption charges

Kuwait refers former minister to public prosecution over corruption charges

DUBAI: A former Kuwaiti minister was referred to the public prosecution on Sunday on suspicion of facilitating the embezzlement of public funds and causing “harm to the state’s finances.”

The Kuwait Anti-Corruption Authority announced the step as it vowed to continue its fight to protect public funds and thanked “whistleblowers” for providing information that led to arrests.

The authority reaffirmed that it would ensure the safety of individuals who chose to collaborate with its anti-corruption investigations.