Hezbollah strikes Israeli army intelligence base near Tel Aviv

Update Hezbollah strikes Israeli army intelligence base near Tel Aviv
Above, Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system intercepts incoming projectiles over Tel Aviv on Oct. 23, 2024. (AFP)
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Hezbollah strikes Israeli army intelligence base near Tel Aviv

Hezbollah strikes Israeli army intelligence base near Tel Aviv
  • Israel’s air force shoot down two rockets from Lebanon that set off air raid sirens in Tel Aviv
  • Hezbollah fighters launched ‘a rocket salvo’ at ‘the Glilot base of the military intelligence unit... in the Tel Aviv suburbs’

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Hezbollah group said it fired rockets at an Israeli military intelligence base in the Tel Aviv suburbs Wednesday, following a night of strikes on the group’s south Beirut bastion.

Hezbollah fighters launched “a rocket salvo” at “the Glilot base of the military intelligence unit... in the Tel Aviv suburbs,” the group said in a statement, referring to a base targeted several times in recent days. It said the rocket fire was “in response to attacks and massacres committed by the Zionist enemy.”

Israel’s air force shot down two rockets from Lebanon that set off air raid sirens in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, the military said.

The downing of the rockets came shortly after Israeli forces intercepted two drones launched from the east targeting the Red Sea port city of Eilat, the military said.

There were no immediate reports of injuries in either the drone or rocket attacks.

The Islamic Resistance in Iraq group said it attacked Eilat with drones twice on Wednesday. The pro-Iranian militant group said it struck “vital” targets.


Germany, Qatar see need for more diplomatic efforts in the Middle East

Germany, Qatar see need for more diplomatic efforts in the Middle East
Updated 28 sec ago
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Germany, Qatar see need for more diplomatic efforts in the Middle East

Germany, Qatar see need for more diplomatic efforts in the Middle East

BERLIN: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Qatar’s Emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, stressed the importance of a two-state solution in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and called for intensified diplomatic efforts to achieve a lasting peace in the region during talks in Germany on Tuesday, a government spokesperson said.


Israel army issues new evacuation call for south Lebanon city of Tyre

Israel army issues new evacuation call for south Lebanon city of Tyre
Updated 47 min 42 sec ago
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Israel army issues new evacuation call for south Lebanon city of Tyre

Israel army issues new evacuation call for south Lebanon city of Tyre
  • he Israeli army called on residents of parts of the south Lebanon city of Tyre to evacuate on Wednesday

JERUSALEM: The Israeli army called on residents of parts of the south Lebanon city of Tyre to evacuate on Wednesday ahead of military operations targeting Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.
The army’s Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee posted a map of the affected streets in Tyre on social media platform X, saying: “You must immediately move out of the area marked in red and head north of the Awali River. Anyone who is near Hezbollah elements, facilities and combat equipment is putting his life in danger.”


At BRICS, Turkiye seeks to expand strategic reach

At BRICS, Turkiye seeks to expand strategic reach
Updated 49 min 15 sec ago
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At BRICS, Turkiye seeks to expand strategic reach

At BRICS, Turkiye seeks to expand strategic reach
  • Experts say the move is economically-driven and aligns with Ankara’s desire for ‘strategic autonomy’
  • ‘The Turkish government sees that the unquestioned hegemony of the West cannot continue as it is’

ISTANBUL: Turkiye’s overtures toward BRICS may be a first for a NATO member, but experts say the move is economically-driven and aligns with Ankara’s desire for “strategic autonomy.”
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan joins the BRICS summit in the Russian city of Kazan Wednesday at the invitation of his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. He will meet with the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
Turkiye said last month it had asked to join the group of emerging market nations. If admitted, it would be the first NATO member in a bloc which sees itself as a counterweight to Western powers.
Most of its members are sharply at odds with the West over the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and in the case of Beijing and Moscow, also its stance on the Ukraine war.
BRICS is an acronym for its five founding members although the alliance added four nations this year, three from the Middle East — including Iran which the West says is supplying Russia with drones to use against Ukraine.
But experts said Turkiye’s bid to join did not mean it will turn its back on the West, nor on Ukraine, whose top diplomat visited on Monday — let alone NATO.
“The government is continuing to deepen its ties with countries that are not members of the Western alliance, in line with the strategic autonomy that Turkiye is pursuing,” Sinan Ulgen, a researcher at the Carnegie Europe think tank, said.
“But the initiative is also partly economic: it’s expected to have a positive impact on bilateral economic relations.”
he BRICS nations represent just under half of the world’s population and around a third of global gross domestic product.
As a “platform,” it does not impose binding economic obligations on members as does the European Union, at whose door Ankara has been knocking since 1999.
Erdogan raised a similar point last month. “Those who say (don’t join BRICS) are the same people who have kept Turkiye waiting at the EU’s door for years,” he said.
“We cannot cut ties with the Turkic and Islamic world just because we are a NATO country: BRICS and ASEAN are structures that offer us opportunities to develop economic cooperation,” he said.
Ulgen said it was clear the two issues were connected.
“Turkiye would not have taken these steps (toward BRICS) if it had been able to pursue integration talks with Europe, or even with (upgrading) the customs union” which has been stalled since 1996.
Soli Ozel, an international relations professor at Istanbul’s Kadir Has University, said Turkiye was responding to an anticipated shift in the global center of gravity.
“The Turkish government sees that the unquestioned hegemony of the West cannot continue as it is,” he said.
“And like many other countries, it is trying to position itself to have more of a say if a new order emerges in an asymmetrically multipolar world.”
Ankara wanted to take advantage of the “weakening” of Western influence, he said, “particularly that of the United States, to see whether it can create more room for maneuver.”
But Turkiye remained part of “the security-conscious West and its economy certainly remains part of the European economy,” he added.
For Gokul Sahni, a Singapore-based analyst, Ankara wanted the best of both worlds.
“Turkiye wants to benefit from being West-adjacent, but — knowing it can’t ever become part of the West — it wants to partner closely with the non-Western BRICS” countries, he said.
And it was a no-risk gamble because joining BRICS “has no security implications,” he said.
“Turkiye will never leave NATO,” said Ozel, but its rapprochement with BRICS reflects “the need for change, the desire to obtain more from emerging regional powers.”


Cattle disease wreaks havoc in Libya

Cattle disease wreaks havoc in Libya
Updated 23 October 2024
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Cattle disease wreaks havoc in Libya

Cattle disease wreaks havoc in Libya
  • The outbreak in Libya has dealt a major blow to many cattle farmers, who say they have yet to receive vaccines for their animals as dairy and meat production suffers

MISRATA: On Najmeddine Tantoun’s farm on the outskirts of the western Libyan city of Misrata, the usual whir of hundreds of dairy milking machines has given way to near silence.
The farmer has lost almost half his cows to an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, a highly contagious illness affecting hoofed animals.
The outbreak in Libya has dealt a major blow to many cattle farmers, who say they have yet to receive vaccines for their animals as dairy and meat production suffers.
Most of the North African country’s revenue comes from its oil resources, but Misrata is a major dairy center which used to produce 70,000 liters of milk a day.
Output has now fallen to 20,000 per day, according to Salem Al-Badri, 45, head of the city’s committee of cattle farmers.
Tantoun, 27, said “the future looks bleak.”
“I almost lost everything,” he said. “From 742 cows, we lost about 300. This disease is destroying our livelihoods.”
The disease particularly affects ruminant livestock, such as cattle, sheep and goats. It causes fever, blisters — and sometimes death.
In Misrata, some farmers have reported losing about 70 percent of their cattle to the disease, according to Badri’s committee.
“We are heading toward a catastrophe,” Badri, who is also in charge of the city’s animal health office, said during a visit to Tantoun’s farm.
“The delay in vaccines has cost us dearly,” he added. “Most of the cows in Misrata are now infected and we have no choice but to slaughter them to stop the epidemic.”
The disease has also inflicted financial hardship on consumers as shortages drive up the price of meat and dairy.
Badri said another cattle ailment called lumpy skin disease has also had an impact, with foreign buyers growing wary of importing Libyan cowhide.
Libya is struggling to recover from years of conflict after the 2011 uprising that overthrew longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi.
It remains split between a United Nations-recognized government of Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah and the rival authority in the east backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar.
Cattle farmers blame the authorities’ for a lack of pre-emptive safety measures, as well as a slow response during the outbreak which caused delays in delivering vaccines to the affected regions.
Badri said that “if the vaccines had been delivered last November, we would not be here.”
“I have asked the authorities several times to deliver the vaccines to us in order to save the farms,” he said.
When contacted by AFP, the authorities in Tripoli did not respond.
Authorities in the east and west have rolled out emergency vaccination plans with support from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, but some farmers said the response had often come too late.
Badri said a group of cattle farmers have filed a lawsuit with the attorney general.
One of the main causes of the spread of these diseases is the illegal importation of animals without veterinary control, the agriculture ministry has said.
Additionally, contamination spreads uncontrollably as cases are not reported to local authorities in time, it said, adding that some cattle might have died without being reported either.
“We depend entirely on these animals for our livelihood,” said Tantoun, adding that he had “given everything” for his farm to succeed.
“Losing so many cows is an economic disaster.”
He called on authorities in Misrata “not only to provide the necessary vaccines” but also “to compensate” cattle farmers whose cows have suffered from the disease.
Farmer Ali Ghabag said he has completely given up on cattle farming “out of fear for the future.”
“Nobody wants to continue in this sector anymore,” the 40-year-old said.
“The risks have become too big, and we don’t know if we will overcome this crisis.”


Desperation amid search for survivors of an airstrike on a crowded area near major Beirut hospital

Desperation amid search for survivors of an airstrike on a crowded area near major Beirut hospital
Updated 23 October 2024
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Desperation amid search for survivors of an airstrike on a crowded area near major Beirut hospital

Desperation amid search for survivors of an airstrike on a crowded area near major Beirut hospital
  • Residents standing on mounds of debris said an entire family remained missing under the rubble

BEIRUT: Nearly 16 hours after an Israeli airstrike hit across the street from Beirut’s main public hospital, rescuers were still removing debris Tuesday from the overcrowded slum area. An excavator was digging at one of the destroyed buildings, picking out twisted metal and bricks in search for bodies.
Residents standing on mounds of debris said an entire family remained missing under the rubble.
Mohammad Ibrahim, a Sudanese national, came looking for his brother. “His mobile phone is still ringing. We are trying to search for him,” he said. “I don’t know if he is dead or alive.”
Hours later, health officials said five bodies had been recovered from under the rubble. At least 18 people were killed, including four children, and at least 60 wounded in the strike that also caused damage across the street at the Rafik Hariri University Hospital, the capital’s main public medical facility.
Jihad Saadeh, director of the Rafik Hariri Hospital, said the strike broke several glass windows and the solar panels of the medical facility, which continued to operate despite the damage and the panic. None of the staff was injured.
Saadeh said the hospital received no warning of the impending strike, just a few meters (yards) across the street. Neither did the residents of the slum area, where several buildings were crammed and which houses several migrant workers as well as working class Lebanese.
The Israeli military said it struck a Hezbollah target, without elaborating. It added had not targeted the hospital itself.
It was hard for rescue equipment to reach the area of clustered settlements and dusty narrow roads.
Nizar, one of the rescuers, said he had been at the site of the explosion since Monday night. “It was too dark and there was so much panic,” he said, giving only his first name in line with the rescue team’s regulations. “People didn’t understand yet what had happened.”
The overcrowded slum was covered in debris, furniture and remains of life poking out of the twisted metal and broken bricks. Residents who survived the massive explosion were still in shock, some still searching through the debris with their hands for their relatives or what is left of their lives. Gunmen stood guard at the site. The Lebanese Civil Defense said Tuesday five buildings were destroyed and 12 sustained severe damage. The dead included one Sudanese and at least one Syrian.
“This is a very crowded area; buildings are very close. The destruction is massive,” Nizar said, explaining that the scale of the damage made their rescue effort harder.
Across the street, the hospital was still treating a few of the injured. The morgue had received 13 bodies.
Hussein Al-Ali, a nurse who was there when the attack happened, said it took him a few minutes to realize it was not the hospital that was hit. Dust and smoke covered the hospital lobby. The glass in the dialysis unit, the pharmacy and other rooms in the hospital was shattered. The false roof fell over his and his colleagues’ heads.
“We were terrified. This is a crime,” said Al-Ali. “It felt like judgment day.”
It took only minutes for the injured from across the street to start streaming in. Al-Ali said he had little time to breathe or reassure his terrified colleagues and the rattled patients.
“Staff and patients thought the strike was here. We fled outside as the injured were coming in,” he said. And when he was done admitting the injured, “we came out to carry our (killed) neighbors. They are our neighbors.”
Ola Eid survived the strike. She helped dig out her neighbors’ children from under the rubble, before realizing she herself was injured.
“The problem is we didn’t feel it. They didn’t inform us. We heard they want to strike Al-Sahel hospital,” said Eid, bandaged and still in shock sitting at the hospital gate. Israel had hinted another hospital miles away could possibly be a target, alleging it is housing tunnels used by the Hezbollah militant group.
Eid, an actor, said she was playing with her neighbor’s kids when the first explosion hit. It knocked her to the floor and scattered the candy she was handing out to the kids. She stood up, not believing she was still alive, to find her neighbor’s kid soaked in blood. One was killed immediately; the other remained in intensive care.
“I looked ahead and saw the kids torn apart and hurt,” she said. “The gas canisters were on fire. I didn’t know what to do — put out the fire or remove the kids.”