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Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War

Wars 2023 10/08 Monitoring the Israel and Lebanon War
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Israel strikes toppling 11-storey building in Beirut
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 23 November, 2024, 00:30

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Fire and smoke erupt from a building just after an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s southern Shayah neighbourhood on Friday, amid the on-going war between Israel and Hezbollah. | AFP photo

Israeli air strikes hit Hezbollah’s south Beirut stronghold on Friday and crumpled an 11-storey building, official media reported and AFP images showed, after Israeli military evacuation warnings.

The latest raids follow intense Israeli attacks in recent days on south Beirut as well as other areas in Lebanon’s south and east, where Israel says it has been targeting Iran-backed Hezbollah militants.

Israeli strikes on Friday also hit south Lebanon, the National News Agency said, as the Israeli military issued warnings for part of the coastal city of Tyre and swathes of nearby areas, as well as several other locations in the country’s south.

The state-run NNA said Israeli warplanes launched strikes on two buildings just inside Beirut’s southern suburbs, near the centre of the capital.

An AFP photographer captured the moment a missile struck the middle of an 11-storey building housing shops, a gym and apartments, located on a usually busy street in the heavily populated Shiyah district.

The impact sparked a fireball and caused the structure to collapse on top of itself, littering the road with debris.

The NNA reported people fled an adjacent neighbourhood after Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee warned on social media platform X that the military would strike ‘Hezbollah facilities and interests’ in Shiyah.

The NNA earlier Friday reported several other Israeli strikes on south Beirut, adding that ‘thick smoke was seen rising from the vicinity of the Lebanese University’ in the Hadath neighbourhood.

AFPTV footage showed plumes of smoke over the southern suburbs.

The Israeli military said in a statement its ‘fighter jets completed a new round of strikes’ on Beirut’s southern suburbs.

The NNA said that for the first time, Israeli troops on Friday entered the village of Deir Mimas, around 2.5 kilometres from the border.

‘Enemy reconnaissance aircraft’ were flying over Deir Mimas, which has been largely emptied of residents, warning people ‘not to leave their homes’, the NNA reported.

Hezbollah said its fighters targeted Israeli troops in the area with rockets and artillery.

The Israeli army has been seeking to advance at several points along the border, most prominently in the town of Khiam, where Hezbollah said it repeatedly attacked troops on Friday.

Israel’s military said on Friday it had killed two commanders involved in Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack, pressing its north Gaza offensive a day after the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants over the war.

The International Criminal Court on Thursday said that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defence minister Yoav Gallant may bear ‘criminal responsibility’ for the war crime of starvation as a method of warfare and other crimes against humanity against Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.

The Hague-based court’s decision drew mixed reactions from world leaders, with some vowing to arrest the Israelis if they entered their country’s territory.

Other leaders, including US president Joe Biden, have condemned the court’s decision which Netanyahu dismissed as ‘absurd’ and ‘driven by anti-Semitic hatred of Israel’.

Israel has similarly pushed back against accusations of genocide in its war against Hamas, with a case brought before the International Court of Justice in December and, more recently, a report issued by a UN special committee last week.


On the ground in Gaza, the military said an air strike on the territory’s north killed five Hamas militants including two company commanders ‘who participated in the October 7 massacre’ last year.

Medics said dozens were killed or missing after an overnight Israeli raid on Beit Lahia and nearby Jabalia, which are among the targets of a sweeping Israeli assault on north Gaza.

The civil defence agency was not immediately able to provide an exact toll.

Biden, in a statement responding to the ICC’s arrest warrants, called them ‘outrageous’, vowing to ‘always stand with Israel against threats to its security’.

China, which like Israel and the United States is not a member of the ICC, urged the court to ‘uphold an objective and just position’.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said that Beijing ‘supports any efforts... that are conducive to achieving fairness and justice’.

The ICC also issued an arrest warrant for Hamas’s military chief Mohammed Deif, accusing him of responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity over the attack on Israel that sparked the war, as well as ‘sexual and gender-based violence’ against hostages.

Israel said it killed Deif in July, but Hamas has not confirmed his death.

The Palestinian Authority and Hamas both welcomed the warrants — though without mentioning Deif.

Iran, which backs Hamas, Hezbollah and other armed groups in the region, praised the arrest warrants against the Israeli leaders.

‘This means the end and political death of the Zionist regime,’ said Revolutionary Guards chief General Hossein Salami.

The ICC’s move theoretically limits the movement of Netanyahu, as any of the court’s 124 national members would be obliged to arrest him on their territory.

But on Friday, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban said he would invite Netanyahu to visit and defy the ‘cynical’ and ‘political’ ICC warrant.

The Israeli prime minister, in a video statement, said that ‘no outrageous anti-Israel decision will prevent us from continuing to defend our country in every way.’

At least 44,056 people have been killed in Gaza in more than 13 months of war, most of them civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-ruled territory’s health ministry which the United Nations considers reliable.

It was triggered by the deadliest attack in Israeli history, which resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

More than 11 months of cross-border fire between Israel and Hezbollah over the Gaza conflict escalated into all-out war in September, with Israel conducting an extensive bombing campaign and sending ground troops into southern Lebanon.

The Lebanese health ministry said at least 52 people were killed on Thursday in Israeli strikes, including some 40 dead in Lebanon’s east, taking its overall death toll since October 2023 to 3,583 people.​
 
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Israeli strikes kill Lebanon hospital chief, 17 others
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 24 November, 2024, 00:05

Lebanon said an Israeli air strike in the heart of Beirut that brought down a residential building and jolted residents across the city killed at least 11 people on Saturday.

Earlier on Friday Lebanon’s health ministry said an Israeli air strike on Friday killed the director of Dar al-Amal hospital in the east of the country near Baalbek and six of his colleagues.

A ministry statement announced the ‘loss of Dr Ali Rakan Allam, director of Dar al-Amal university hospital, and six colleagues in a cowardly Israeli attack which targeted his residence near the hospital’. It also denounced ‘continual Israeli aggression against medical staff and facilities’.

After the Saturday’s attack, rescue operations were underway in the area in the morning, with an excavator removing the rubble of the eight-storey building, and a fire truck and civil defence rescuers stationed nearby.

The state-run National News Agency said Israeli jets had launched six missiles at the structure, causing ‘widespread destruction in buildings’ nearby.

Lebanon’s health ministry says at least 3,645 people have been killed since October 2023, when Hezbollah began trading fire with Israel in solidarity with its Palestinian ally Hamas. Most of the deaths have been since September this year.

Gaza’s civil defence agency said that 19 people, including at least six children, were killed by Israeli air strikes and tank fire on Saturday.

Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that ‘19 people were killed and more than 40 others wounded in three massacres caused by Israeli air strikes in the Gaza Strip between midnight and this morning’, as well as by tank fire in Rafah in the territory’s south.

One of the strikes hit a house in the Zeitun neighbourhood of Gaza City in the north of the territory, killing seven people, three of them children, and wounding 10.

‘What did these people do?’ said Abdullah Shaldan, a member of the family whose house was destroyed. ‘They were sleeping in their homes -- they are civilians who have nothing to do with Hamas or the resistance.’

AFPTV footage showed people searching the rubble using torches and mobile phones in the darkness, while a young boy desperately cried ‘papa’.

Another strike in the main southern city of Khan Yunis killed six people, including three children, and wounded 26 displaced people who were living in tents near the house that was struck, said Bassal.

In Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip, four people were killed in another strike on a house, and in Rafah, along the territory’s southern border, two young men were killed by tank fire, Bassal said.

At least 44,056 people have been killed in Gaza during more than 13 months of war.​
 
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The IDF has lost more than a 100 soldiers in S Lebanon over the last 3 weeks and dozens of Merkava tanks. Hundreds of Hezb rockets have also found their mark in Israel causing devastation.

Iran needs to intensify this and conduct a decisive TP-3 attack. Its long overdue.
 
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Hezbollah launches attacks on Tel Aviv, south Israel
Agence France-Presse . Jerusalem 24 November, 2024, 23:44

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Palestinian boys share a plate of food in their displacement tent at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Sunday, amid the on-going war between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas group. | AFP photo

Israel’s army said Hezbollah fired around 160 projectiles into its territory from Lebanon on Sunday, with the militant group saying its attacks had targeted the Tel Aviv area and Israel’s south.

The Iran-backed group said in a statement that it had ‘launched, for the first time, an aerial attack using a swarm of attack drones on the Ashdod naval base’ in southern Israel.

Later, it said it fired ‘a barrage of advanced missiles and a swarm of attack drones’ at a ‘military target’ in Tel Aviv, and had also launched a volley of missiles at the Glilot army intelligence base in the city’s suburbs.

The Israeli military did not comment on the specific attack claims when contacted by AFP.

But it said earlier that air raid sirens had sounded in several locations in central and northern Israel, including in the greater Tel Aviv suburbs.

It later reported that ‘approximately 160 projectiles that were fired by the Hezbollah terrorist organisation have crossed from Lebanon into Israel’.

Some of the projectiles were shot down.

Medical agencies reported that at least 11 people were wounded, including a man in a ‘moderate to serious’ condition.

AFP images from Petah Tikva, near Tel Aviv, showed several damaged and burned-out cars, and a house pockmarked by shrapnel.

The wave of projectiles follows at least four deadly Israeli strikes in central Beirut in the past week, including one that killed Hezbollah spokesman Mohammed Afif.

In a speech on Wednesday, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem had said the response to the recent strikes on the capital ‘must be expected on central Tel Aviv’.

The Lebanese army, meanwhile, said that a soldier was killed on Sunday and 18 others injured, ‘including some with severe wounds, as a result of an Israeli attack targeting a Lebanese army centre in Amriyeh’.

Though the Lebanese army is not a party to the war between Israel and Hezbollah, Israeli strikes have killed 19 Lebanese soldiers in the last two months, authorities have said.

Since September 23, Israel has intensified its Lebanon air campaign, later sending in ground troops after nearly a year of limited exchanges of fire initiated by Hezbollah in support of its ally Hamas after the Palestinian group’s October 7, 2023 attack, which sparked the Gaza war.

Lebanon’s health ministry says at least 3,670 people have been killed in the country since October 2023, most of them since September this year.

Meanwhile, Gaza’s civil defence agency said Sunday a drone strike overnight seriously injured a hospital chief in an attack on the healthcare facility, and 11 people were killed in Israeli raids on the Palestinian territory.

Hossam Abu Safiya heads the Kamal Adwan hospital, one of just two partly operating in northern Gaza, as the war-ravaged territory is in the grip of a dire humanitarian crisis.

Abu Safiya suffered an injury to his back and left thigh by metal fragments after an attack on the hospital complex, civil defence agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said.

After losing a lot of blood, the doctor was in a ‘stable’ condition, Bassal said, adding an Israeli drone bombed the hospital in Beit Lahia, north Gaza.

Vowing to stop Hamas from regrouping, Israel on October 6 began an air and ground operation in Jabalia and then expanded it to Beit Lahia.

Hospital staff have reported several strikes on the facility, while the World Health Organisation chief said he was ‘deeply concerned about the safety and well-being of 80 patients, including eight in the intensive care unit’ at Kamal Adwan hospital.

Hospitals in the Gaza Strip have been hit multiple times since the outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas, sparked by the Palestinian militant group Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Gaza’s civil defence agency on Sunday morning also said 11 people, ‘including children’, after two Israeli air strikes on Al-Bureij and Al-Maghazi refugee camps in central Gaza and artillery fire in Beit Lahia.

Witnesses also described artillery fire in Al-Mawasi in southern Gaza.

‘I am afraid,’ said 30-year-old Rania Abu Jazar, after she was forced to leave her makeshift shelter, a tent, in the early hours of the morning after intense fire.

‘My children are hungry and my one-year-old daughter Amal’s milk is in the tent. I do not know what to do. If we return, they might shell us again, the tanks are blind and they do not care about killing children and women,’ she added.​
 
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Fresh strikes, clashes in Lebanon after ceasefire calls
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 26 November, 2024, 00:46

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Palestinians queue to receive a food ration outside a distribution center west of Gaza City, on Monday, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the militant Hamas group. | AFP photo

Israel conducted strikes against Hezbollah’s Beirut stronghold on Monday and battles raged in Lebanon’s south after the Iran-backed militant group claimed 50 attacks on Israeli targets the day before.

Lebanon’s health ministry said 12 people were killed on two locations in Lebanon’s Tyre district.

The ministry, in separate statements, reported a strike on a road near the city of Tyre that left ‘six dead and body parts’ requiring identification, as well as four wounded, while another left ‘six dead and four wounded’ in the town of Maaraka.

The heavy exchanges of fire over the weekend included deadly strikes on Beirut and other areas of Lebanon, and fighting on the ground between Hezbollah militants and Israeli soldiers, particularly around the southern town of Khiam.

The Israeli military said Hezbollah fired 250 projectiles into Israel on Sunday, part of a wave of attacks the militants said had targeted areas including the Ashdod naval base in southern Israel and military sites near Tel Aviv.

The Israeli army warned in a statement on X it would target Hezbollah ‘facilities and interests’ in Beirut’s southern suburbs, the Iran-backed group’s main stronghold.

The military later said the air force had ‘conducted intelligence-based strikes on several Hezbollah command centres’ in the area.

Lebanon’s official National News Agency reported ‘three strikes on the vicinity of Haret Hreik’, and AFPTV images showed thick smoke rising from the southern suburbs.

The strikes followed heavy raids on the area the night before.

Lebanon’s education ministry suspended classes on Monday for schools, technical institutes and private higher education institutions in Beirut and a number of surrounding areas, citing ‘the current dangerous conditions’.

Israeli ground forces have also entered several villages and towns near Lebanon’s southern border, including Khiam, where NNA on Monday reported clashes with Hezbollah fighters.

The escalation came as the United States and the European Union pushed for a truce in a war Lebanon says has killed at least 3,754 people in Lebanon since October 2023, most of them in the last two months.

In Beirut on Sunday, top EU diplomat Josep Borrell called for an immediate ceasefire, after a US envoy said last week that a deal was ‘within our grasp’.

The envoy, Amos Hochstein, headed to Israel after a visit to Lebanon, where he met with senior Lebanese officials and twice sat down with a key mediator for Hezbollah.

Neither Israel nor the United States has issued official comments on the Israel visit.

Jean-Noel Barrot, the foreign minister of France — which along with the United States has spearheaded the efforts towards a truce — called on Israel and Lebanon on Sunday to seize a ‘window of opportunity’ to negotiate an end to the fighting.

The US news site Axios reported that the parties were close to a deal that would involve a 60-day transition period in which the Israeli army would pull back, the Lebanese army would redeploy near the border and Hezbollah would withdraw its heavy weapons north of the Litani River.

The draft agreement also provides for the establishment of a US-led committee to oversee implementation, as well as US assurances that Israel can take action against imminent threats if the Lebanese military does not, according to Axios.

Israeli media also reported that prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was likely to greenlight a US ceasefire proposal.

The war in Lebanon followed nearly a year of limited exchanges of cross-border fire initiated by Hezbollah in support of its ally Hamas after the Palestinian group’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which sparked the war in Gaza.

The hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah have killed at least 82 soldiers and 47 civilians on the Israeli side, authorities say.

They have also forced tens of thousands of Israelis to flee their homes, which Israel says its campaign in Lebanon intends to rectify.

One displaced resident of Shlomi, an Israeli town near the Lebanese border, said she did not want to see a truce that would allow Hezbollah to regroup.

‘I don’t want a ceasefire, because if they do it along the lines that they’ve announced, we’ll be in the same place in five years,’ said 51-year-old teacher Dorit Sison.

‘I am very pessimistic about this agreement. The only thing I want is for my daughter to sleep well at night, without rocket alerts, and for her not to be afraid of anything.’

Israel has said any ceasefire deal must ensure it still has the ‘freedom to act’ against Hezbollah in the event of violations.

Israel’s far-right national security minister Itamar Ben Gvir warned reaching a ceasefire deal in Lebanon would be a ‘historic missed opportunity to eradicate Hezbollah’.

‘I understand all the constraints and reasons, and still it is a grave mistake,’ he wrote on X.

The Israeli army, meanwhile, said a deadly weekend strike in the downtown Beirut neighbourhood of Basta had struck ‘a Hezbollah command centre’.

The Lebanese health ministry said the strike killed 29 people and wounded 67.

It had hit a residential building in the heart of Beirut before dawn on Saturday, leaving a large crater, AFP journalists at the scene reported.

A senior Lebanese security source said ‘a high-ranking Hezbollah officer was targeted’, without confirming whether or not they had been killed.

But Hezbollah official Amin Cherri said no leader of the movement had been targeted in Basta.​
 
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Netanyahu approves Lebanon ceasefire deal ‘in principle’: CNN
CNN
Published :
Nov 25, 2024 20:15
Updated :
Nov 25, 2024 20:15

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Smoke rises after an Israeli airstrike on Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon on Monday. Bilal Hussein/AP

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved the emerging ceasefire deal with Hezbollah “in principle” during a security consultation with Israeli officials Sunday night, CNN reports citing a source familiar with the matter.

Israel still has reservations over some details of the agreement, which were expected to be transmitted to the Lebanese government on Monday, the source said.

Those and other details are still being negotiated and multiple sources stressed that the agreement will not be final until all issues are resolved.

A ceasefire agreement will also need to be approved by the Israeli cabinet, which has not yet occurred.

Sources familiar with the negotiations said talks appear to be moving positively toward an agreement, but acknowledged that as Israel and Hezbollah continue to trade fire, one misstep could upend the talks.

United States envoy Amos Hochstein said in Beirut last week that a ceasefire deal between Israel and Lebanon was “within our grasp,” but that it was ultimately “the decision of the parties.”

He met Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati and parliament speaker Nabih Berri, the interlocutor with Hezbollah in the talks and said there had been “constructive” and “very good discussions to narrow the gaps.”

“We have a real opportunity to bring conflict to an end,” he added last week. “The window is now.” He departed Lebanon for Israel on Wednesday to try to bring the negotiations “to a close.”

The US-backed proposal aims to achieve a 60-day cessation of hostilities that some hope could form the basis of a lasting ceasefire.

On Sunday, CNN analyst and Axios reporter Barak Ravid cited a source as saying Hochstein had told the Israeli ambassador to Washington on Saturday that if Israel did not respond positively in the coming days to the ceasefire proposal, he would withdraw from the mediation efforts.

Hochstein’s trip to the region followed Beirut responding “positively” to a US-backed proposal to stop the war, Mikati said last week, adding that large parts of the draft agreement were resolved.

Israel launched a major military offensive in Lebanon in mid-September following months of tit-for-tat border attacks which started on October 8 last year when Hezbollah attacked Israeli controlled territory in solidarity with Hamas and Palestinians in Gaza.

Since then, Israel has launched a ground invasion, killed a string of Hezbollah leaders – including one of its founders, Hassan Nasrallah – and injured thousands of people in an attack featuring exploding pagers.​
 
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Hezb has ramped up its rocket and drone attacks on Israel and blunted the IDF offensive in Khayyam city inflicting significant losses on the IDF armored core.

More than a 100 Israeli's have died in the last 24 hrs and Israel's lost another dozen Merkava tanks and APC's to Hezb ATGM fire and drone strikes.
 
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Hezb has ramped up its rocket and drone attacks on Israel and blunted the IDF offensive in Khayyam city inflicting significant losses on the IDF armored core.

More than a 100 Israeli's have died in the last 24 hrs and Israel's lost another dozen Merkava tanks and APC's to Hezb ATGM fire and drone strikes.
proofs do

footaze dikhain pleaje
 
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