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[🇱🇧] Monitoring Israel and Lebanon War

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[🇱🇧] Monitoring Israel and Lebanon War
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Israel kills 71 civilians in Lebanon since ceasefire: UN
Agence France-Presse . Geneva 15 April, 2025, 22:44

Israeli forces have killed dozens of civilians in Lebanon since a ceasefire took effect late last year, including a number of women and children, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

The UN rights office reported that Israeli military operations had killed and injured civilians in Lebanon in the four months since the fragile truce between Israel and Hezbollah on November 27.

‘According to our initial review, at least 71 civilians have been killed by Israeli forces in Lebanon since the ceasefire came into effect,’ rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan told reporters in Geneva.

‘Among the victims are 14 women and 9 children,’ he said, urging that ‘the violence must stop immediately’.

The delicate truce between Israel and Hezbollah came after more than a year of hostilities initiated by the Iran-backed militant group over the Gaza conflict, including two months of all-out war when Israel also sent in ground troops.

But months after the agreed end to fighting, Kheetan warned that people in Lebanon ‘people remain gripped by fear, and over 92,000 are still displaced from their homes’.

The rights office noted that Israeli strikes on Lebanese territory had hit civilian infrastructure since the ceasefire, including residential buildings, medical facilities, roads and at least one cafe.

The southern suburbs of Beirut were also hit in early April for the first time since the ceasefire took effect, in two different incidents, Kheetan said, adding that the area targeted was near two schools.

‘A strike on a residential building in the early morning of April 1 killed two civilians and caused significant damage to neighbouring buildings,’ he said.

Two days later, ‘Israeli airstrikes hit a newly established medical centre run by the Islamic Health Society in Naqoura in southern Lebanon, completely destroying the centre and damaging two ambulances’, he said.

He added that ‘multiple Israeli airstrikes on several towns in the south of Lebanon reportedly killed at least six people’ between April 4 and 8.

Israel had also faced attacks since the truce took effect, Kheetan said.

Since last November, at least five rockets, two mortars and a drone were launched from Lebanon towards northern Israel, he said, citing figures from the Israeli army, adding that ‘tens of thousands of Israelis are still reportedly displaced from the north’.

Kheetan demanded that all parties to the conflict ‘respect international humanitarian law, including the principles of distinction, proportionality and precaution’.

‘There must be prompt, independent and impartial investigations into all allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law, and those found responsible must be held to account.’​
 

Israel kills 71 civilians in Lebanon since ceasefire: UN
Agence France-Presse . Geneva 15 April, 2025, 22:44

Israeli forces have killed dozens of civilians in Lebanon since a ceasefire took effect late last year, including a number of women and children, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

The UN rights office reported that Israeli military operations had killed and injured civilians in Lebanon in the four months since the fragile truce between Israel and Hezbollah on November 27.

‘According to our initial review, at least 71 civilians have been killed by Israeli forces in Lebanon since the ceasefire came into effect,’ rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan told reporters in Geneva.

‘Among the victims are 14 women and 9 children,’ he said, urging that ‘the violence must stop immediately’.

The delicate truce between Israel and Hezbollah came after more than a year of hostilities initiated by the Iran-backed militant group over the Gaza conflict, including two months of all-out war when Israel also sent in ground troops.

But months after the agreed end to fighting, Kheetan warned that people in Lebanon ‘people remain gripped by fear, and over 92,000 are still displaced from their homes’.

The rights office noted that Israeli strikes on Lebanese territory had hit civilian infrastructure since the ceasefire, including residential buildings, medical facilities, roads and at least one cafe.

The southern suburbs of Beirut were also hit in early April for the first time since the ceasefire took effect, in two different incidents, Kheetan said, adding that the area targeted was near two schools.

‘A strike on a residential building in the early morning of April 1 killed two civilians and caused significant damage to neighbouring buildings,’ he said.

Two days later, ‘Israeli airstrikes hit a newly established medical centre run by the Islamic Health Society in Naqoura in southern Lebanon, completely destroying the centre and damaging two ambulances’, he said.

He added that ‘multiple Israeli airstrikes on several towns in the south of Lebanon reportedly killed at least six people’ between April 4 and 8.

Israel had also faced attacks since the truce took effect, Kheetan said.

Since last November, at least five rockets, two mortars and a drone were launched from Lebanon towards northern Israel, he said, citing figures from the Israeli army, adding that ‘tens of thousands of Israelis are still reportedly displaced from the north’.

Kheetan demanded that all parties to the conflict ‘respect international humanitarian law, including the principles of distinction, proportionality and precaution’.

‘There must be prompt, independent and impartial investigations into all allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law, and those found responsible must be held to account.’​
Hezb alone has killed well over 6k IDF since Oct 7th and seriously injured double that number.

Israel is not happy with Hezb........
 

2 killed in strikes on Lebanon
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 20 April, 2025, 23:18

Lebanese president Joseph Aoun said Sunday that disarming the Iran-backed Hezbollah group was a ‘delicate’ matter whose implementation required the right circumstances, warning that forcing the issue could lead the country to ruin.

His remarks came as Lebanon’s health ministry said two people were killed in Israeli strikes in the country’s south, the latest such raids despite a ceasefire between Israel and the Lebanese militant group.

Restricting the bearing of arms to the state is ‘a sensitive, delicate issue that is fundamental to preserving civil peace’ and requires due ‘consideration and responsibility’, Aoun told reporters.

‘We will implement’ a state monopoly on bearing arms ‘but we have to wait for the circumstances’ to allow this, he said, adding that ‘nobody is speaking to me about timing or pressure’.

‘Any controversial domestic issue in Lebanon can only be approached through conciliatory, non-confrontational dialogue and communication. If not, we will lead Lebanon to ruin,’ he added.

Hezbollah, long a dominant force in Lebanon, was left weakened by more than a year of hostilities with Israel, sparked by the Gaza war, including an Israeli ground incursion and two months of heavy bombardment that decimated the group’s leadership.

On Friday, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said the group ‘will not let anyone disarm’ it, as Washington presses Beirut to compel the movement to hand over its weapons.

Qassem said his group was ready for dialogue on a ‘defence strategy’, ‘but not under the pressure of occupation’ by Israel.

Israel has continued to conduct regular strikes in Lebanon despite a November 27 ceasefire and still holds five positions in south Lebanon that it deems ‘strategic’.

On Sunday, Lebanon’s health ministry said an ‘Israeli enemy strike on a vehicle in Kaouthariyet al-Saiyad’, located inland between the southern cities of Sidon and Tyre, killed ‘one person’ and wounded two others.

It later said a separate ‘Israeli enemy’ strike ‘on a house in Hula’, near the border, killed one person.

The Israeli military did not immediately release any official statement on the strikes.

Qassem’s comments came hours after another senior Hezbollah official said the group would refuse to discuss handing over its weapons until Israel withdrew completely from south Lebanon.

US deputy special envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus this month said disarming Hezbollah should happen ‘as soon as possible’.

Under the truce, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters north of Lebanon’s Litani River and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south, while Israel was to withdraw all its forces.

Lebanon’s army has been deploying as Israeli troops have withdrawn and has also been dismantling any Hezbollah military infrastructure.

The army said on Sunday that its forces had confiscated rockets and launchers in south Lebanon’s Sidon-Zahrani area and detained a number of people over a plan to fire them towards Israeli-held territory, without saying if those detained were affiliated with any group.

On Wednesday, the army said it had arrested several people suspected of firing rockets at Israel from Lebanon last month, with a security official telling AFP that three members of the Palestinian militant group Hamas were among those held.​
 

Israeli strike kills Lebanese leader in Beirut
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 22 April, 2025, 22:36

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Security forces and forensic experts inspect a car targeted by an Israeli air strike near Damour. | AFP photo

A military leader from Hamas-aligned Lebanese Islamist group Jamaa Islamiya died Tuesday in an Israeli strike south of Beirut, a security official said, as authorities reported another dead in a separate raid.

Israel has continued to carry out regular strikes on Lebanon despite a November truce with militant group Hezbollah that sought to halt more than a year of hostilities between the foes including two months of all-out war.

Lebanon’s civil defence said ‘an Israeli drone targeted a car’ near the coastal town of Damour, about 20 kilometres south of Beirut, and rescuers recovered a man’s body from the vehicle.

Jamaa Islamiya in a statement announced the death of Hussein Atoui, described as ‘an academic leader and university professor’.

It said an Israeli drone strike ‘targeted his car as he was travelling to his workplace in Beirut’.

A security official said Atoui was a leader of Jamaa Islamiya’s armed wing, the Al-Fajr Forces.

An AFP photographer saw the charred wreckage of a car at the scene. The Lebanese army had cordoned off the area and forensic teams were conducting an inspection.

Jamaa Islamiya, closely linked to both Palestinian militant group Hamas and Lebanon’s Hezbollah, claimed responsibility for multiple attacks against Israel before the November 27 ceasefire.

Also Tuesday, Lebanon’s health ministry said an ‘Israeli enemy’ strike in south Lebanon’s Tyre district killed one person.

Under the truce, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters north of Lebanon’s Litani River and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south.

Israel was to withdraw all its forces from south Lebanon, but troops remain in five positions that it deems ‘strategic’. Israel on Sunday said it killed two senior members of Hezbollah in strikes on Lebanon.

After unclaimed rocket fire against Israel in late March, Lebanon’s army said last week it had arrested several Lebanese and Palestinian suspects, while a security official said they included three Hamas members.​
 

HRW accuses Israel of attacks on civilians in Lebanon war
Agence France-Presse . Beirut 23 April, 2025, 21:27

1745455607495.png

AFP photo

Human Rights Watch accused Israel on Wednesday of ‘indiscriminate’ attacks on civilians during its recent war with Hezbollah, saying two deadly strikes in east Lebanon should be investigated as war crimes.

A November 27 ceasefire sought to end more than a year of hostilities between the two sides that began with Iran-backed Hezbollah’s cross-border fire at Israel in support of its Palestinian ally Hamas.

More than 4,000 people were killed in Lebanon, most of them during two months of all-out war that erupted in September, according to Lebanese authorities.

Among the dead were hundreds of Hezbollah fighters and a slew of senior commanders.

HRW said ‘two unlawful Israeli strikes’ on the town of Yunin in the eastern Bekaa Valley that killed more than 30 people ‘were apparent indiscriminate attacks on civilians’.

‘At least one of the attacks used an air-dropped bomb equipped with a United States-produced Joint Direct Attack Munition guidance kit,’ it said.

‘The attacks should be investigated as war crimes.’

On September 25, a strike ‘killed a family of 23 people, all Syrians, including 13 children’, HRW said, while another on November 1 on a two-storey house ‘killed 10 people, including two children, one of them a year old’.

HRW said it ‘did not find any evidence of military activity or targets at either site’ and that the Israeli army did not issue evacuation warnings ahead of the strikes.

The rights watchdog said it had contacted the Israeli military about its findings but had ‘not received a response’.

AFP has also contacted the military for comment on the report.

HRW’s Ramzi Kaiss said in the statement that ‘more and more evidence is emerging that Israeli forces repeatedly failed to protect civilians or adequately distinguish civilians from military targets during its strikes across Lebanon’.

Washington’s supply of weapons to Israel ‘has made the US complicit in their unlawful use’, HRW added.

It urged the Lebanese government to give ‘the International Criminal Court jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes’ and provide ‘a path for justice for grieving families’.

Swathes of Lebanon’s south and east and parts of Beirut’s southern suburbs were heavily damaged by Israeli bombardment during the hostilities.

Last month, rights group Amnesty International said Israel’s attacks on ambulances, paramedics and health facilities in Lebanon during the conflict should also be investigated as war crimes.​
 

Israeli strike kills 1 in South Lebanon
Agence France-Presse . Beirut, Lebanon 28 June, 2025, 22:20

An Israeli strike on southern Lebanon killed one person on Saturday, the Lebanese health ministry said, the latest attack despite a ceasefire between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah.

In a statement, the health ministry said that an ‘Israeli enemy’ drone strike on a car in Kunin, South Lebanon, killed one man in a preliminary toll.

The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the incident.

The attack comes a day after Israel killed a woman and wounded 25 other people in strikes across the country’s south.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported that the woman was killed in an Israeli drone strike on an apartment in the city of Nabatiyeh.

Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee said on social media that the army ‘did not target any civilian building’.

The Friday attacks included a ‘wave of successive heavy strikes’ in the Nabatiyeh region which injured seven people, according to the NNA.

The Israeli military said it ‘identified rehabilitation attempts made by Hezbollah beforehand and struck terror infrastructure sites in the area’.

Adraee said the civilian building ‘was hit by a rocket that was inside the [fire and defence array] site and launched and exploded as a result of the strike’.

Israel has repeatedly bombed its northern neighbour despite the November ceasefire that aimed to end over a year of hostilities with Hezbollah.

Under the ceasefire deal, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters back north of the Litani river, some 30 kilometres from the Israeli border, leaving the Lebanese army and United Nations peacekeepers as the only armed parties in the region.

Israel was required to fully withdraw its troops from the country but has kept them in five locations in south Lebanon that it deems strategic.​
 

Israeli strikes on south Lebanon kill three people
Hezbollah warns its patience wearing thin

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Israeli strikes killed three people in southern Lebanon later on Saturday despite a ceasefire in force there, authorities said, with Iran-backed Hezbollah suggesting its patience for the "ongoing aggression" was wearing thin.

The Lebanese health ministry said an "Israeli enemy" drone strike on a car in Kunin, south Lebanon, killed one man and wounded another person.

The Israeli military said the strike "eliminated the terrorist Hassan Muhammad Hammoudi", who it said was responsible for anti-tank missile attacks on Israeli territory during the recent war.

In a second statement later on Saturday, the health ministry said a strike on a motorcycle in Mahrouna, near Tyre, resulted in "two martyrs and wounded one person", with one of the dead a woman.

The Israeli military said it carried out a strike Saturday that "eliminated the terrorist Abbas Al-Hassan Wahbi in the area of Mahrouna in southern Lebanon.

The IDF statement said Wahbi was a Hezbollah intelligence official "involved in efforts to rebuild Hezbollah and weapons transfers."

"These activities constitute a blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon," it said.

The attacks came a day after Lebanon blamed Israel for strikes that killed a woman and wounded 25 others.​
 

Israeli strikes kill 1 in south Lebanon
Agence France-Presse . Beirut, Lebanon 05 July, 2025, 23:04

1751761704760.png

File photo

Lebanon said one person was killed and six wounded on Saturday in a series of Israeli strikes in the south despite a ceasefire between Israel and militant group Hezbollah.

An ‘Israeli enemy drone strike on a vehicle’ in the town of Bint Jbeil ‘killed one person and wounded two’, Lebanon’s health ministry said in a statement carried by the official National News Agency.

The ministry later reported one person wounded in a drone strike on another car in the same town, and two others seriously wounded in a similar raid on a vehicle in nearby Shaqra.

Earlier Saturday, the ministry reported that a separate Israeli drone strike wounded one person in Shebaa, elsewhere in the south, with NNA reporting that a house was targeted.

Israel has kept up its bombardment of Lebanon since a November 27 ceasefire that sought to end more than a year of hostilities with Hezbollah including two months of all-out war that left the Iran-backed group severely weakened.

On Thursday, an Israeli strike on a vehicle at the southern entrance of Beirut killed a man and wounded three other people, Lebanon said, as the Israeli army said it hit a ‘terrorist’ working for Iran.

Under the ceasefire deal, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters back north of the Litani River, about 30 kilometres from the Israeli border, leaving the Lebanese army and United Nations peacekeepers as the only armed parties in the region.

Israel was required to fully withdraw its troops from the country, but has kept them in five places it deems strategic.

Israel has warned that it will keep striking Lebanon until Hezbollah has been disarmed.​
 

US envoy in Beirut for talks on Hezbollah disarmament as Israel ramps up strikes

REUTERS
Published :
Jul 07, 2025 17:03
Updated :
Jul 07, 2025 17:03

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US Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack meets with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon, in this handout image released on Jul 7, 2025. Photo : Lebanese Presidency Press Office/Handout via REUTERS

A US envoy met Lebanese officials in Beirut on Monday to discuss a proposed plan to disarm Hezbollah, hours after Israel launched new air strikes and a cross-border ground assault.

The Israeli escalation was seen by Lebanese officials and diplomats as an attempt to ratchet up pressure on Hezbollah, whose leader Naim Qassem said in a televised speech on Sunday that the group still needed arms to defend Lebanon from Israel.

Hezbollah emerged badly damaged from a war with Israel last year that eliminated much of the group's leadership, killed thousands of its fighters and left tens of thousands of its supporters displaced from their destroyed homes.

The group has been under pressure in recent months both within Lebanon and from Washington to completely relinquish its weapons. It is weighing shrinking its arsenal, sources told Reuters last week, without disarming in full.

US envoy Thomas Barrack's proposal, delivered to Lebanese officials during his last visit on Jun 19, would see Hezbollah fully disarmed within four months in exchange for the withdrawal of Israeli troops occupying several posts in south Lebanon and a halt to Israeli air strikes.

Lebanon formed a committee to draft a response. Hezbollah was expected to provide its own feedback to its ally, Speaker of Parliament Nabih Berri, to incorporate into a counter-proposal being prepared in time for Barrack's Monday visit.

The group did not make its response public, but two sources familiar with its deliberations said Hezbollah had told Berri it would not discuss giving up any more arms before Israeli troops fully left Lebanon and without guarantees Israel would stop targeting group members.

Hezbollah had already relinquished a number of weapons depots in southern Lebanon to the Lebanese army in line with a US-brokered truce that ended last year's war.

The truce also stipulates that Israeli troops withdraw. Hezbollah has pointed to the troops' continued occupation of at least five posts in southern Lebanon as a main violation.​
 

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