Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon

Update Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon
There was no sign of an immediate exodus from the villages of southern Lebanon. (AFP)
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Updated 24 September 2024
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Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon

Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon
  • Israel starts ‘war of extermination against Lebanon’ amid displacement of people in south and Bekaa
  • Lebanese PM urges UN and world powers to deter Israel’s ‘destructive plan’

BEIRUT: Israeli airstrikes killed at least 490 people, including children, in Lebanon on Monday, the Health Ministry said, in what is by far the deadliest cross-border escalation since war erupted in Gaza on Oct. 7.

Monday’s confrontations between Hezbollah and the Israeli army entered a new phase of violence, disregarding all red lines.

The Litani River no longer served as a boundary to Israeli expansion northward.

According to the Lebanese Health Ministry’s health emergency center, the initial toll from more than 350 Israeli airstrikes on southern Lebanon and the Bekaa region was 356 dead and 1,246 wounded, including children, women, and paramedics.

The battle, which Hezbollah calls the “open-ended battle of reckoning,” has ignited Lebanon from the south to the east, with the Israeli army launching a series of wide-ranging air attacks early in the morning.

Dozens of warplanes simultaneously targeted residential homes, the squares of populated towns, valleys, and forests.

The Israeli military claimed that Hezbollah “uses civilian homes and private civilian facilities as hideouts to launch rockets,” similar to the war scenario in the Gaza Strip.

Israeli army spokesperson Daniel Hagari said that “Hezbollah is hiding guided missiles inside civilian homes.” Meanwhile, an advisor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted: “Hezbollah used Iranian drones against Israel.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said that Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah had turned the people of Lebanon into “hostages, placing rockets and weapons inside their homes and towns to threaten Israel’s home front.”

He said the people of Lebanon should evacuate “any house that has become a site for the service of the Hezbollah organization to avoid harm.”

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said that the ongoing Israeli “aggression against Lebanon constitutes a genocide in every sense of the word, as well as a destructive plan aimed at annihilating villages and towns and eradicating all green spaces.”

He reiterated his appeal to “decision-making countries to exert pressure on Israel to cease its aggression, implement UN Security Council resolution 2735, and resolve the Palestinian issue based on the adoption of the two-state solution and a just and comprehensive peace.”

He said: “We reaffirm our full commitment to resolution 1701 and, as a government, we are working to halt the renewed Israeli war while striving to avoid, as much as possible, falling into the unknown.”

Mikati spoke as the Israeli army launched on Monday morning a series of large-scale attacks from Lebanon’s south to east.

The army vowed to target sites deep in the Bekaa Valley in the afternoon.

Dozens of towns in the border region and in the area of Tyre were targeted by airstrikes.

The Israeli army hit a home housing seven people in the town of Barich in the Tyre district, killing five people, including children.

It also targeted the Nabatieh area, western Bekaa (specifically Machghara, Sohmor, and Yohmor), as well as the Jezzine area and Deir Al-Zahrani, all the way to Maghdoucheh and Ghaziyeh on the outskirts of Sidon.

The echoes of Israeli airstrikes on northern Bekaa resonated throughout the region.

People spoke of “highly destructive Israeli missiles.”

Loud explosions shook the Hermel highlands near the Syrian border.

A strike on these highlands killed one person and injured six others, two of whom are in intensive care.

Injured children were separated from their families upon being transferred to hospitals, prompting appeals for anyone with information about their relatives to come forward.

Women who were in their homes were buried under the rubble.

Calls were made through social media for nurses to report to hospitals that had exceeded their capacity to assist in providing care to those in need.

The Ministry of Health has requested that “all hospitals in the southern provinces, as well as in Nabatieh and Baalbek-Hermel, suspend all non-urgent procedures to allocate resources for the treatment of casualties resulting from the ongoing Israeli aggression against Lebanon.”

Israeli media reported that some airstrikes penetrated as deep as 125 km into Lebanese territory.

The Israeli Broadcasting Authority said that the air force “attacked the northern Lebanon Valley area, about 130 km from Israel’s northern border.”

The Israeli army accompanied its aggression with recorded voice messages to Lebanese cell phones in various areas, especially the south and Bekaa, extending to Beirut and Akkar in the north.

The messages urged people to evacuate homes near Hezbollah centers.

The telecom company Ogero reported that Lebanon received “about 80,000 suspected Israeli call attempts.”

The messages instructed people to “evacuate areas where Hezbollah weapons or infrastructure are located within at least 1,000 meters, or head to the local school and not return until further notice.”

The warning was echoed by a similar statement from the Israeli army’s spokesperson, addressing “villages in the Bekaa region.”

The airstrikes and phone threats had an immediate effect, as schools halted operations and urged parents to pick up their children.

Many families quickly fled from southern areas, which until recently were considered safe, heading deeper into Lebanon.

The entrance to Sidon, leading to Beirut, was jammed with thousands of cars carrying families and their belongings.

Displaced people have moved from the south to the predominantly Christian and Druze areas of Mount Lebanon, as well as to Beirut, which has a Sunni majority.

Additionally, some displaced persons have arrived in Akkar, located in the far north of Lebanon, where efforts have been made to provide them with housing.

The spokesperson for the Israeli army, Avichay Adraee, claimed that the military targeted “only the buildings that contain weapons belonging to Hezbollah.”

He addressed the residents of Lebanese villages, asking them to evacuate the homes where Hezbollah had concealed weapons immediately.

He said Hezbollah “is deceiving you and sacrificing you. While Hezbollah claims that you are part of its community and its supporters, it appears that its missiles and drones are more valuable and significant to it than you are.”

Reports on Monday indicated that an Israeli missile fell in a barren area in the Jbeil district in northern Lebanon, predominantly inhabited by Christians, with a Shiite presence.

The Lebanese army investigated the incident, and security sources suggested that the missile might have landed accidentally in the area.

UNIFIL, the UN’s peacekeeping force in Lebanon, asked all its civilian employees to leave with their families to safe areas north of the Litani River.

In response to the Israeli attack, Hezbollah said it “bombed the reserve headquarters of the Israeli army’s northern corps, the Galilee Division Reserve Base, and its stores of logistics at Ami’ad Base as well as Rafael’s military-industrial complexes in Zevulun area, north of Haifa, with dozens of missiles.”

Sirens sounded in Margaliot in the Upper Galilee, as reported by Israeli media.


Lebanon official media say Israeli gunfire kills woman in border town

Lebanon official media say Israeli gunfire kills woman in border town
Updated 5 sec ago
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Lebanon official media say Israeli gunfire kills woman in border town

Lebanon official media say Israeli gunfire kills woman in border town
BEIRUT: Lebanese official media said Israeli forces killed a woman in a southern border town on Sunday as residents sought to return home, two days ahead of an Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire deadline.
Lebanon’s army shortly later urged residents against heading to border areas where its forces had not completed deployment.
The official National News Agency (NNA) said that Israeli “occupation forces shot in the direction of Hula neighborhoods after residents entered, leading to the death of a woman and the wounding of other people.”
“Three citizens were kidnapped by Israeli forces in the town,” the NNA added, after earlier reporting that residents had entered by passing a Lebanese army checkpoint and “dirt barriers set up by the Israeli army.”
A fragile ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon’s Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah came into effect on November 27 after more than a year of hostilities including two months of all-out war.
Under the deal, Lebanon’s military was to deploy in the south alongside United Nations peacekeepers as the Israeli army withdrew over a 60-day period.
Hezbollah was also to pull back north of the Litani River — about 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the border — and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south.
The withdrawal period was extended to February 18, after Israel missed the initial deadline.
Both sides have accused each other of violations.
When the initial ceasefire deadline expired in late January, Lebanese authorities said Israeli fire killed 26 people in two days as residents tried to return to border villages.
Lebanon’s army on X emphasized “the need for citizens not to head toward southern areas where the (Lebanese military) deployment has not been completed... in order to preserve their safety and avoid the death of innocent people.”
It pointed to “the danger of unexploded ordnance left by the Israeli enemy, as well as the possibility of the presence of enemy forces in those areas.”
This week, Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee on X again warned people against heading south, noting that the Israeli army “is still deployed on the ground.”
On Saturday, the NNA said an Israeli strike on a vehicle in the south’s Lebanon’s Iqlim Al-Tuffah area killed two people. The Israeli army said it targeted a senior militant from Hezbollah’s aerial unit.
On Thursday, a senior Israeli security official said the military was prepared to withdraw from Lebanese territory “within the timeline” set by the US-French-mediated ceasefire agreement.
The same day, Lebanon’s parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri said the United States had informed him that, while Israel would withdraw on February 18, “it will remain in five locations.”
Lebanese officials have rejected the demand.

Egypt’s El-Sisi discusses Mideast peace with World Jewish Congress chief

Egypt’s El-Sisi discusses Mideast peace with World Jewish Congress chief
Updated 16 February 2025
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Egypt’s El-Sisi discusses Mideast peace with World Jewish Congress chief

Egypt’s El-Sisi discusses Mideast peace with World Jewish Congress chief

CAIRO: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi told the head of the World Jewish Congress Ronald Lauder on Sunday that the establishment of a Palestinian state is “the only guarantee” for lasting peace in the Middle East.
During his meeting with Lauder in Cairo on Sunday, El-Sisi called for starting the reconstruction of war-battered Gaza “without displacing its residents from their land,” according to a statement from his office.
The Egyptian leader’s remarks come as Arab countries are scrambling to come up with an alternative to a controversial plan floated by US President Donald Trump to take over Gaza, redevelop the coastal territory and turn it into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”
Trump’s proposal envisages permanently resettling Gaza’s Palestinian residents elsewhere, including Egypt and Jordan, drawing widespread condemnation from Arab and world leaders.
“The establishment of a Palestinian state... is the only guarantee to achieve lasting peace,” El-Sisi told Lauder on Sunday.
According to the Egyptian presidency statement, Lauder praised Egypt’s “wise efforts” to restore stability in the region.
The leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates are set to met in Riyadh on Thursday to discuss Trump’s proposal, ahead of an emergency Arab League summit in Cairo a week later to discuss the same issue.
 


Shipment of ‘heavy’ US bombs arrives in Israel

Shipment of ‘heavy’ US bombs arrives in Israel
Updated 16 February 2025
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Shipment of ‘heavy’ US bombs arrives in Israel

Shipment of ‘heavy’ US bombs arrives in Israel
  • Development takes place as US secretary of state discusses Gaza truce with Israel PM 
  • Israel, Hamas complete sixth swap of nearly month-old ceasefire after 15-month war

TEL AVIV:  Israel’s defense ministry said Sunday that a shipment of “heavy” US-made bombs arrived overnight in Israel, as Marco Rubio began his first visit to the country as Washington’s top diplomat.
“A shipment of heavy aerial bombs recently released by the US government was received and unloaded overnight in Israel,” the ministry said in a statement, referring to MK-84 munitions recently authorized by President Donald Trump’s administration.
Rubio landed at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv and is due to hold talks with Israeli officials on Sunday when he will highlight Trump’s controversial proposal to take control of the Gaza Strip, which has been devastated by more than 15 months of war between Hamas and Israel.
Coming from Munich, where he took part in a security conference dominated by the Ukraine war, the top US diplomat is set to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Sunday.
Netanyahu, who recently visited Washington where he met Donald Trump, expressed his appreciation for the US president’s “full support” for Israel’s next moves in Gaza.
“Israel will now have to decide what they will do,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Saturday.
“The United States will back the decision they make!” he added.
Rubio arrived in Israel hours after Hamas freed three Israeli hostages in Gaza in exchange for the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in the sixth swap of a nearly month-old ceasefire.
The ceasefire came close to collapse earlier this week and Netanyahu credited “President Trump’s firm stance” with ensuring Saturday’s releases went ahead.
In his meetings, the US top diplomat is expected to discuss the second phase of the ceasefire, which should see the release of remaining hostages and a more permanent end to the war but which has yet to be agreed in detail.
A source close to the negotiations said mediators hope to begin talks on the second phase “next week in Doha.”
Washington has expressed openness to alternative proposals from Arab governments but has stressed that currently, “the only plan is Trump’s.”
Trump has proposed taking control of the Palestinian territory and displacing its residents to Egypt or Jordan, both of which strongly oppose the proposal.
Trump has warned of repercussions for Egypt and Jordan if they do not allow in the more than two million Palestinians in Gaza.
“Right now the only plan — they don’t like it — but the only plan is the Trump plan. So if they’ve got a better plan, now’s the time to present it,” Rubio said on Thursday.

 


Hamas ministry says Israel strike kills three policemen in Gaza

Hamas ministry says Israel strike kills three policemen in Gaza
Updated 16 February 2025
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Hamas ministry says Israel strike kills three policemen in Gaza

Hamas ministry says Israel strike kills three policemen in Gaza

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Hamas said an Israeli strike on Sunday killed three police officers near the southern Gaza city of Rafah, a day after Israel and militants carried out a hostage-prisoner swap.

The Hamas-run interior ministry initially reported that two officers were killed and a third was critically wounded in a strike while they were deployed in the Al-Shouka area, east of Rafah, to secure aid.

The third officer later succumbed to his wounds, the ministry said in an updated statement.

The Israeli military said in a statement that its air force struck “several armed individuals moving toward troops in the southern Gaza Strip.”

A fragile ceasefire that came into effect on January 19 between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas has largely brought a pause to more than 15 months of fighting in the coastal Palestinian territory.

Since then, Israel has conducted at least one other air strike in Gaza. On February 2, it said one of its aircraft fired toward a “suspicious vehicle” in central Gaza.

The ceasefire was more recently put to test when Hamas said it would not release Israeli hostages on Saturday, accusing Israel of violating terms of the agreement, particularly on the topic of aid entry.

In response, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had warned Israel would resume “intense fighting” in Gaza unless Hamas returns the hostages by noon on Saturday.

Following intense mediation by Qatar and Egypt the latest hostage-prisoner swap was carried out on Saturday.


Netanyahu says Israel and Trump have ‘common strategy’ on Gaza

Netanyahu says Israel and Trump have ‘common strategy’ on Gaza
Updated 16 February 2025
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Netanyahu says Israel and Trump have ‘common strategy’ on Gaza

Netanyahu says Israel and Trump have ‘common strategy’ on Gaza
  • Rubio to discuss Gaza truce with Israel PM on first leg of Mideast tour

TEL AVIV:  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel and US President Donald Trump had a “common stragegy” on Gaza’s future, after he met visiting top US diplmat Marco Rubio.
“We discussed Trump’s bold vision for Gaza’s future and will work to ensure that vision becomes a reality,” Netanyahu told reporters after the meeting, adding that the two leaders had a “common strategy” for the future of the Palestinian territory.
Rubio landed at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv and is due to hold talks with Israeli officials on Sunday when he will highlight Trump’s controversial proposal to take control of the Gaza Strip, which has been devastated by more than 15 months of war between Hamas and Israel.
Coming from Munich, where he took part in a security conference dominated by the Ukraine war, the top US diplomat is set to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Sunday.
Netanyahu, who recently visited Washington where he met Donald Trump, expressed his appreciation for the US president’s “full support” for Israel’s next moves in Gaza.
“Israel will now have to decide what they will do,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Saturday.
“The United States will back the decision they make!” he added.
Rubio arrived in Israel hours after Hamas freed three Israeli hostages in Gaza in exchange for the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners in the sixth swap of a nearly month-old ceasefire.

Israel’s defense ministry also said Sunday that a shipment of “heavy” US-made bombs arrived overnight in Israel. 
“A shipment of heavy aerial bombs recently released by the US government was received and unloaded overnight in Israel,” the ministry said in a statement, referring to MK-84 munitions recently authorized by Trump’s administration.
The ceasefire came close to collapse earlier this week and Netanyahu credited “President Trump’s firm stance” with ensuring Saturday’s releases went ahead.
In his meetings, the US top diplomat is expected to discuss the second phase of the ceasefire, which should see the release of remaining hostages and a more permanent end to the war but which has yet to be agreed in detail.
A source close to the negotiations said mediators hope to begin talks on the second phase “next week in Doha.”
Washington has expressed openness to alternative proposals from Arab governments but has stressed that currently, “the only plan is Trump’s.”
Trump has proposed taking control of the Palestinian territory and displacing its residents to Egypt or Jordan, both of which strongly oppose the proposal.
Trump has warned of repercussions for Egypt and Jordan if they do not allow in the more than two million Palestinians in Gaza.
“Right now the only plan — they don’t like it — but the only plan is the Trump plan. So if they’ve got a better plan, now’s the time to present it,” Rubio said on Thursday.