Displaced in southern Lebanon describe ‘significant’ damage to homes caused by Israeli assaults

People check the rubble of a building in Bint Jbeil in southern Lebanon near the border with Israel, following Israeli bombardment the previous night, on December 27, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 July 2024
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Displaced in southern Lebanon describe ‘significant’ damage to homes caused by Israeli assaults

  • Hezbollah missiles target Israeli soldiers and spy equipment as explosions rock the Galilee Panhandle and Kiryat Shmona
  • Hezbollah and Amal are allied against Israel on the southern border but continue to compete for dominance elsewhere, sparking sporadic violence

BEIRUT: As hostilities between Hezbollah and the Israeli army along Lebanon’s southern border have de-escalated over the past few days, some displaced residents have taken the opportunity during the relative calm to return and check the condition of their homes.

“The material and moral damage is significant, and the village lost the largest number of young martyrs,” said a woman from the Bazzi family, who fled the village of Bint Jbeil for the safety of Mount Lebanon. “I don’t know how Bint Jbeil could be rebuilt.”

Meanwhile, Hezbollah forces on Monday targeted Israeli soldiers near the Branit barracks and spy equipment at Al-Raheb outpost with missile attacks. Explosions could be heard in the Galilee Panhandle and Kiryat Shmona. The situation in southern Lebanon is closely linked to developments in negotiations with Hamas over the war in Gaza.

Elsewhere, the fierce rivalry between Hezbollah and the Amal Movement continues to grow in areas controlled by the former, as both parties compete to extend their power in each other’s strongholds, particularly the southern suburbs of Beirut and surrounding villages.

A Lebanese security source said there have been repeated clashes in areas where the parties have been vying for support in the run-up to Ashura, an Islamic day of commemoration that falls this year on July 16. Religious tents have been set up for the celebration outside mosques and in other public spaces in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Clashes between Hezbollah and Amal supporters so far have been largely contained before they could escalate, as both groups seek to assert their influence in neighborhoods. Their rivalry peaked on Saturday night when members of the Amal Movement set up a checkpoint and prevented a resident of the suburb of Hay Madi from reaching his building by car, citing security concerns as a pretext.

The incident escalated into an exchange of insults and then a fistfight before shots were fired by an Amal supporter. Other armed individuals intervened, demanding the checkpoint be removed, and the residential area became a war zone as heavy gunfire forced women, children and elderly residents to flee in terror.

Hezbollah security official Samir Kabbani was shot in the head and killed during the fighting. A number of civilians were reportedly injured. The security source said the clash was “not the first but the bloodiest.”

Ali Al-Amin, the editor-in-chief of the Janoubia news website, said a previously declared alliance between Hezbollah and the Amal Movement to confront Israel along the southern border is a forced arrangement and does not reflect any sense of harmony between the parties.

Ashura has “turned from a religious commemoration into an occasion for displaying power,” he added. “Each party now tries to show its capabilities and dominance by encroaching on the territory of others.

“The Hay Madi neighborhood in the southern suburbs of Beirut serves as an extension of the security zone for Hezbollah in the suburbs. Consequently, the clash may have been intended to reinforce the demarcation of influence boundaries.”

The conflict might also have stemmed from a “prevailing atmosphere of demagoguery,” as politicians attempt to appeal to people’s desires and prejudices, Al-Amin added.

Amid the long-running, severe economic crisis in Lebanon, Hezbollah has allocated $3 million to set up religious reception sites, a resident of the southern suburbs said. Each site received $10,000 to fund the distribution of food, drinks and sweets to residents, they added.

Al-Amin said the extravagance of organizing such events indicated “a desire to control the population.”

He added: “These manifestations were not seen last year but are now accompanied by a war led by Hezbollah in the south, resulting in prolonged displacement and unease among residents who had heavily invested in the south under the assumption of its stability.

“Despite the populace’s agitation and their feeling of oppression, disgust and dissatisfaction, they are under the sway of Hezbollah as it is the sole entity that has asserted its capability to compensate the people. Additionally, it wields significant security influence, which may have played a part in the clashes with the Amal movement.

“People might protest and express their dissent but where can they turn to? They will ultimately return to those who offer them protection, and this authority currently lies not with the government but with Hezbollah, who proclaim this both in words and actions.”


Child among 10 killed in Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon

Updated 55 min 38 sec ago
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Child among 10 killed in Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon

  • At least eight Hezbollah members were killed in separate Israeli raids targeting the border area in southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: Israeli airstrikes across southern Lebanon on Friday killed at least 10 Lebanese citizens, including a 10-year-old boy, before Hezbollah responded with artillery rounds and rockets across the border.
The intensified Israeli escalation coincided with a meeting between Lebanese Army Commander General Joseph Aoun and French Army Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations Gen. Thierry Garreta.
Both parties “discussed ways to enhance cooperation between the two armies and developments on the southern border,” said the Lebanese Army Command.
A security source said on Friday that the Israeli “focus seemed to be on targeting anything that moves in the field, whether on the front lines or the rear ones, regardless of the affiliations of those moving or their military positions in Hezbollah.” 
The source also pointed to “the young ages of those targeted.”
At least eight Hezbollah members were killed in separate Israeli raids targeting the border area in southern Lebanon.
Some areas were targeted for the first time since the opening of the southern front and the beginning of hostilities between Hezbollah and the Israeli army on Oct. 8, 2023.
At 8 a.m., Hezbollah announced “the launching of salvos of rockets toward Mount Meron in the Upper Galilee, targeting the espionage equipment at the headquarters of the Air Monitoring and Operations Management Unit at the Meron base with appropriate weapons, hitting it directly, which resulted in destroying it.”
Israeli media reported that the alert level was raised in the north, noting “an interesting day ahead of us.”
It indicated damage to the Meron air base caused by two rockets
The Israeli army has opened an investigation into the incident.
Israeli Channel 12 quoted an army spokesman saying that the military observed the launching of five rockets from Lebanon on Meron and intercepted some of them, without any injuries.
Israeli warplanes raided Tayr Harfa in the western sector about 10 a.m., killing three Hezbollah members. They were Hassan Wissam Harqous, 19, and Qassem Saleh Harqous, 20, cousins from Toura in the south, and Aqeel Qassem Gharib, 34, from Tayr Harfa. 
At noon, an Israeli drone launched an attack with two guided missiles on a car on the road to Ayta Al-Jabal in the Bint Jbeil district, killing a man called Mohammed Ahmed Najm, a Hezbollah member, and his 10-year-old nephew Zulfikar Fadi Radwan.
The child was running toward his uncle’s car to greet him when the missile struck.
Ayta Al-Jabal has been shelled for the first time since the start of the war on Oct. 8.
Israeli airstrikes hit the towns of Mays Al-Jabal and Dhour Kfarkela.
Artillery shelling targeted the outskirts of the towns of Kfarchouba and Kfarhamam.
The heavy machine gun fire from the Israeli army also hit the town of Aita Al-Shaab in the central sector.
A drone carried out an aerial attack on a motorcycle in Aitaroun in the Bint Jbeil district with a guided missile.
The Health Emergency Center of the Ministry of Health announced that two people were killed and three were injured in the airstrikes that targeted Mays Al-Jabal and Aitaroun.
Sirens sounded in the settlements of Al-Malikiyah and Shtula in Western Galilee.
Also on Friday, Hezbollah announced attacking the Israeli military site of Al-Malikiyah with artillery shells.
According to its consecutive statements, it also targeted “Israeli soldiers positioned in the vicinity of Khazzan Hill with artillery shells,” as well as “the Al-Abad military site.”
Israeli media reported “damage inside the Al-Malikiyah site due to Hezbollah’s rocket shelling.”
The Israeli website “Walla” counted 44 people killed in confrontations with Hezbollah since Oct. 8, 2023, including 24 civilians, 19 officers and soldiers, and one foreign worker.
According to the Israeli site, the number of wounded “reached 271 Israelis, including 141 soldiers and officers in the Israeli army.”
The site also counted “1,091 rockets launched from Lebanon toward Israel last month, indicating a threefold increase compared to the beginning of the year.”


White House sees latest Gaza talks as ‘constructive’

Updated 23 August 2024
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White House sees latest Gaza talks as ‘constructive’

  • John Kirby said Hamas should participate in talks, which included negotiators from Israel, US, Egypt and Qatar

WASHINGTON: Talks in Cairo on reaching a Gaza truce have made progress, the White House said Friday, as it urged Israel and Hamas to move forward.
The White House confirmed that CIA chief William Burns and senior official Brett McGurk were taking part in discussions which started at a preliminary level Thursday evening.
“There has been progress made. We need now for both sides to come together and work toward implementation,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters.
“The preliminary talks that we had going into Cairo last night were constructive in nature. So we want to see that same sort of momentum continue here over the next couple of days,” he said.
Kirby said that reports that the diplomacy was “near collapse” were inaccurate.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited the Middle East this week and said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was onboard with a US proposal to bridge gaps and reach a ceasefire in the more than 10-month conflict.
Kirby said that the United States continued to believe that Netanyahu accepted the proposal, even though the right-wing leader has insisted on Israeli troops staying on the Gaza-Egypt border, butting heads with both Washington and Cairo.
Kirby appealed again to Hamas to accept the proposal, which was laid out last week in talks in the Qatari capital Doha.
“Think about what this deal will do for the people of Gaza. It gets them a period of calm and a potential end of the war and the violence and the bloodshed,” Kirby said.
“It also gets them, because of the stop in the fighting, an incredible opportunity for all of us — and I mean all of us, including the US — to dramatically increase the humanitarian assistance that’s getting in,” he said.


US, Israel defense chiefs discuss ceasefire deal, regional risks, Austin says

Updated 23 August 2024
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US, Israel defense chiefs discuss ceasefire deal, regional risks, Austin says

  • Austin said he also discussed the risk of escalation from Iran and Iran-backed groups in the call

WASHINGTON: US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Friday said he had spoken with his Israeli counterpart to discuss a range of issues in the region, including the ongoing exchanges of fire on the Israel-Lebanon border and the need to finalize a ceasefire deal.

In a post on X, Austin said he also discussed the risk of escalation from Iran and Iran-backed groups in the call on Thursday and told Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant that the United States is well postured across the region.


Iran says 14 Daesh suspects arrested planning attacks

Updated 23 August 2024
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Iran says 14 Daesh suspects arrested planning attacks

  • The 14 members of “Daesh-Khorasan have been arrested” in a series of operations
  • IRNA did not specify the nationalities of those arrested, nor when they were detained

TEHRAN: Iran has arrested 14 suspected Daesh members who were allegedly planning attacks in the country, authorities said on Friday.
The 14 members of “Daesh-Khorasan have been arrested” in a series of operations, the intelligence ministry said in a statement cited by state news agency IRNA.
Daesh-Khorasan, or Daesh-K, is the jihadist group’s Afghanistan branch. “Khorasan” refers to a historical region that included parts of Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia.
IRNA did not specify the nationalities of those arrested, nor when they were detained, but said they were being questioned in the provinces of Tehran, nearby Alborz, Fars in the south, and southwest in Khuzestan.
“The accused came into the country in the past few days aiming to carry out terrorist operations,” the ministry statement said.
In January Daesh, a Sunni Muslim group, claimed twin blasts that killed more than 90 people at a memorial ceremony in Kerman, southern Iran.
It was the deadliest attack in Shiite Muslim-majority Iran since 1978.
At that time, then-interior minister Ahmad Vahidi said Daesh “was carrying out operations in the country in the service of the Zionist regime,” a reference to Iran’s arch-foe Israel.
Since war began in October between Israel and Hamas Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip, tensions have soared between Israel and Iran.
In April, Iranian state media reported the arrest of three suspected Daesh members near Tehran.


Baby paralyzed in Gaza’s first case of type 2 polio for 25 years, WHO says

Updated 23 August 2024
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Baby paralyzed in Gaza’s first case of type 2 polio for 25 years, WHO says

  • The WHO has announced that two rounds of a polio vaccination campaign are set to begin in late August and September 2024
  • Gaza’s health ministry first reported the polio case in the unvaccinated 10-month-old baby a week ago

DUBAI: A 10-month-old baby in war-shattered Gaza has been paralyzed by the type 2 polio virus, the first such case in the territory in 25 years, the World Health Organization said on Friday, with UN agencies appealing for urgent vaccinations of every baby.
The type 2 virus (cVDPV2), while not inherently more dangerous than types 1 and 3, has been responsible for most outbreaks in recent years, especially in areas with low vaccination rates.
UN agencies have called for Israel and Gaza’s dominant Palestinian militant group Hamas to agree to a seven-day humanitarian pause in their 10-month-old war to allow vaccination campaigns to proceed in the territory.
“Polio does not distinguish between Palestinian and Israeli children,” the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) said on Friday in a post on X.
“Delaying a humanitarian pause will increase the risk of spread among children,” Philippe Lazzarini added.
The baby, who has lost movement in his lower left leg, is currently in stable condition, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement.
The WHO has announced that two rounds of a polio vaccination campaign are set to begin in late August and September 2024 across the densely populated Gaza Strip.
With its health services widely damaged or destroyed by fighting, and raw sewage spreading amid a breakdown in sanitation infrastructure, Gaza’s population is particularly vulnerable to outbreaks of disease.
Challenge of vaccinations in war zone
Gaza’s health ministry first reported the polio case in the unvaccinated 10-month-old baby a week ago in the central city of Deir Al-Balah, an often embattled area in the war.
Hamas on Aug. 16 supported a UN request for a seven-day pause in the fighting to vaccinate Gaza children against polio, Hamas political bureau official Izzat Al-Rishq said on Friday.
Israel, which has laid siege to Gaza since last October and whose ground offensive and bombardments have levelled much of the territory, said days later it would facilitate the transfer of polio vaccines into Gaza for around one million children.
The Israeli military’s humanitarian unit (COGAT) said it was coordinating with Palestinians to procure 43,000 vials of vaccine — each with multiple doses — for delivery in Israel in the coming weeks for transfer to Gaza.
The vaccines should be sufficient for two rounds of doses for more than a million children, COGAT added.
As well as allowing the entry of polo specialists into Gaza, the UN has said a successful campaign would require transport for vaccines and refrigeration equipment at every step as well as conditions that would allow the campaign to reach children in every area of the rubble-clogged territory.
Poliomyelitis, a highly infectious virus primarily spread through the fecal-oral route, can invade the nervous system and cause paralysis.
Traces of polio virus were detected last month in sewage in Deir Al-Balah and Khan Younis, two areas in southern and central Gaza that have seen hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced by the fighting seek shelter.
Children under five are particularly at risk.