Situation between Israel and Hezbollah very concerning, German minister says ahead of Lebanon visit

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 June 2024
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Situation between Israel and Hezbollah very concerning, German minister says ahead of Lebanon visit

  • Sonic boom from Israeli warplanes disrupts students taking exams
  • Civil defense member injured in Israeli shelling

BEIRUT: The situation between Israel and Hezbollah is very concerning, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said on Monday, on the eve of her tour of Lebanon, Tel Aviv, and the West Bank.

Baerbock is scheduled to travel to Lebanon to engage in discussions with officials in Beirut in light of Israeli threats of an expanded conflict with Hezbollah.

Her remarks came as the Israeli media said the country’s army has enough ammunition to strike Hezbollah, but that its leadership is exercising caution.

The media reported on Monday that the Israeli military carried out a series of attacks on the Lebanese border area.

Warplanes repeatedly raided the towns of Taybeh, Aitaroun, Kfarkela, and Khiam. Artillery and phosphorus shelling were reported on the outskirts of the towns of Tayr Harfa, Rab El-Thalathine, and Odaisseh, causing fires.

Hezbollah’s Islamic Health Organization reported that the Israeli military “targeted a civil defense team in the town of Taybeh with an artillery shell while they were extinguishing a fire, resulting in one member being injured by shrapnel in his chest and transported to the hospital.”

Hezbollah carried out an ambush on Sunday night in the Metula settlement, targeting a troop transport vehicle, injuring six soldiers, including an officer.

The operation prompted intensified Israeli night raids on southern villages and towns.

A sonic boom caused by an Israeli warplane disrupted students taking exams in Nabatieh.

On the first day of the students’ official regular and vocational exams, the sound barrier was breached, and its echoes were heard in the coastal town of Ghazieh near Sidon.

Despite the unsettling experience, the 1,107 students continued their exams.

Israeli warplanes also broke the sound barrier in two waves over Nabatieh, causing another sonic boom.

The Ministry of Education had facilitated students displaced from the border region to take their exams at centers nearer to their temporary residences.

Hezbollah, meanwhile, targeted the Zebdine site and Zarit Barracks.

It was also reported that a fire broke out at the Margaliot military site following the launching of an anti-tank missile from Lebanon.

Clashes on Sunday culminated after Hezbollah said it carried out “an aerial attack with a squadron of assault drones on the headquarters of the 91st Division in ‘Ayelet Hashahar’ — northeast of Safed — targeting the positions and settlements of officers and soldiers, hitting them directly, killing and wounding them.”

Hezbollah also targeted the Metula site after observing a military vehicle moving in the vicinity of the site with guided missiles, “hitting it and leaving them dead or wounded.”

On Monday, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that the Middle East was close to the conflict expanding into Lebanon.

“The risk of this war affecting the south of Lebanon and spilling over is every day bigger,” Borrell said ahead of a foreign ministers’ meeting in Luxembourg.

“We are on the eve of the war expanding,” Borrell said in a Reuters report.

He spoke as MP Mohammed Raad, the head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, reiterated the party’s position on how to achieve a ceasefire in southern Lebanon.

He said the fate of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu depended on ongoing aggression in Gaza.

“Those seeking a way to stop the aggression are coming to Lebanon.

“The war in Lebanon has only been in solidarity and support for the oppressed in Gaza, so let the Israeli enemy stop its aggression on Gaza, and there is no need to discuss the matter with the Lebanese,” said Raad.


Syrian state media: Israel attacked town near Lebanon border

Updated 3 sec ago
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Syrian state media: Israel attacked town near Lebanon border

DAMASCUS: An Israeli strike hit a Syrian town near the border with Lebanon on Tuesday, Syrian state media said, less than a week after deadly strikes on the same area.
“An Israeli aggression targeted the industrial zone in Al-Qusayr” in Homs province, the official SANA news agency said. There was no immediate news of casualties or damage.

Health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says war death toll at 43,391

Updated 13 min 48 sec ago
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Health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says war death toll at 43,391

  • The toll includes 17 deaths in the previous 24 hours

GAZA STRIP: The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Tuesday that at least 43,391 people have been killed in the year-old war between Israel and Palestinian militants.
The toll includes 17 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry, which said 102,347 people have been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7, 2023.


Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands

Updated 38 min 40 sec ago
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Greece says migrant arrivals rising in south-east islands

  • At the end of October, several hundred migrants set up tents and cardboard houses outside the local government offices of the city of Rhodes, sparking anger among residents
  • Rhodes mayor Alexandros Koliadis told Rodiaki that the island lacks the personnel, police officers and coast guard needed to register the arrivals before transferring them to camps

ATHENS: Some islands in the southeast of the Aegean sea, including Rhodes, are seeing an increase in migrants arriving by boat from Turkiye, Greek migration and asylum minister Nikos Panagiotopoulos said Tuesday.
“The southeast of the Aegean and the island of Rhodes are experiencing migratory pressure right now,” he said on public television station ERT, though he said the increase does not appear to be linked to rising tensions in the Middle East.
At the end of October, several hundred migrants set up tents and cardboard houses outside the local government offices of the city of Rhodes, sparking anger among residents and local authorities.
According to local media Rodiaki, more than 700 migrants arrived during the last week of October.
Rhodes mayor Alexandros Koliadis told Rodiaki that the island lacks the personnel, police officers and coast guard needed to register the arrivals before transferring them to camps on the mainland or in other islands.
Previously, Aegean islands further north such as Lesbos and Samos had received the brunt of migrants crossing from Turkish shores.
Crete, which has likewise seen an increase in arrivals from Libya, also needs to build facilities to process migrants.
Greece has seen a 25 percent increase this year in the number of people fleeing war and poverty, with a 30 percent increase alone to Rhodes and the south-east Aegean, according to the Migration Ministry.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees says 48,158 arrivals have been recorded so far in 2024, of which around 42,000 arrived by boat and 6,000 by crossing the land frontier with Turkiye.
“The camps on the islands have an occupancy rate of 100 percent. But on the mainland they are only 55 percent full, which provides a margin in the event of an increase in arrivals on the islands,” Panagiotopoulos said.


Sudan files AU complaint against Chad over arms: minister

Updated 51 min 17 sec ago
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Sudan files AU complaint against Chad over arms: minister

  • Chad last month denied accusations that it was “amplifying the war in Sudan” by arming the RSF

PORT SUDAN: Sudan’s army-backed government on Tuesday accused neighboring Chad of supplying arms to rebel militias, likely referring to the paramilitary forces it is battling.
The northeast African country has been engulfed by war since April 2023, when fighting broke out between the regular army, led by de facto ruler Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) commanded by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.
Justice minister Muawiya Osman said Burhan’s administration had lodged the complaint against Chad at the African Union.
Speaking to reporters, including AFP, Osman said the government demanded compensation and accused Chad of “supplying arms to rebel militias” and causing “harm to Sudanese citizens.”
“We will present evidence to the relevant authorities,” he added from Port Sudan, where Burhan relocated after fighting spread to the capital, Khartoum.
Chad last month denied accusations that it was “amplifying the war in Sudan” by arming the RSF.
“We do not support any of the factions that are fighting on Sudanese territory — we are in favor of peace,” foreign minister and government spokesman Abderaman Koulamallah said at the time.
The United Nations has been using the Adre border crossing between the two countries to deliver humanitarian aid.
Sudan had initially agreed to keep the crossing open for three months, a period set to expire on November 15. Authorities in Khartoum have yet to decide whether to extend the arrangement.
The Sudanese war has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced more than 11 million, including 3.1 million who are now sheltering beyond the country’s borders.


Explosion at Turkish oil refinery injures 12

Updated 05 November 2024
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Explosion at Turkish oil refinery injures 12

  • The 12 employees sustained slight injuries and were taken to a hospital for examinations

ANKARA: An explosion at an oil refinery in northwestern Turkiye on Tuesday left at least 12 employees slightly injured, the company said. A fire at the facility was quickly brought under control.
The Turkish Petroleum Refineries company, TUPRAS, said a fire broke out at its facilities in Izmit, in Kocaeli province, during maintenance work on a compressor. The company’s emergency teams responded immediately to the incident, it said in a statement.
The 12 employees sustained slight injuries and were taken to a hospital for examinations, the company said.
The company said the unit where the incident occurred “was deactivated in a controlled manner” and that other operations at the refinery were “continuing as normal.”
Earlier, Tahir Buyukakin, the mayor for Kocaeli told private NTV television that the blast occurred during a drill. The fire was quickly brought under control by the company’s own crews and no request for help was made, he said.
Video footage from the site showed smoke rising from the refinery, which is one of Turkiye’s largest. Izmit is about 100 kilometers (62 miles) east of Istanbul.
The Borsa Istanbul stock exchange temporarily halted trading of TUPRAS shares, until the company provides a detailed explanation of the incident.