Heavy Israeli airstrikes hit Hezbollah strongholds

Lebanese army soldiers secure the area of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an apartment on Al-Qaem street in Beirut’s southern suburbs on September 26, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 26 September 2024
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Heavy Israeli airstrikes hit Hezbollah strongholds

  • Death toll climbs above 600, with thousands wounded in first 3 days of onslaught
  • More than 70,000 people have been forced to flee southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: The Israeli military on Thursday stepped up airstrikes on Hezbollah strongholds in Beirut’s southern suburbs and the Bekaa Valley, killing at least one senior militia commander.

For a fourth consecutive day, Israel continued its pursuit of Hezbollah leaders, with an F35 jet targeting a 10-story residential building in the Roueiss area, near the Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Qaim Complex, in south Beirut.

Israel said that the strike killed Mohammed Srur, the head of Hezbollah’s drone unit, who is believed to have overseen recent attacks on northern Israel.

Four people were killed and several others wounded in the strike. Hezbollah has not issued any clarification.

Israel claimed the assassination was in response to rocket fire directed toward Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

In the early hours of Thursday, Israel launched a new round of airstrikes after a lull in exchanges between its military and Hezbollah.

The respite followed international calls for a 21-day ceasefire to allow border issues to be resolved and to reduce longstanding tensions between the two countries.

Prime Minister Najib Mikati’s media office denied reports that he had signed a ceasefire agreement proposal after meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US mediator Amos Hochstein.

However, Mikati welcomed the joint initiative led by the US and France, with support from the EU and Western and Arab countries, to establish a temporary truce.

Israeli warplanes launched dozens of deadly airstrikes after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denied reports of a ceasefire.

In the Bekaa region alone, 155 people were killed and 520 wounded within hours.

For the first time, airstrikes targeted both legal and illegal border crossings between eastern Lebanon and Syria, some under Hezbollah’s control and others used for smuggling.

An attack on a bridge near the Matraba border crossing on the Syrian side injured eight people.

Airstrikes hit the towns of Al-Qasr and Housh Al-Sayyed Ali, including the Al-Arida, Saleh, and Qabash border crossings.

The Israeli army said that it attacked eight border crossings used to bring weapons from Syria to Hezbollah.

Airstrikes killed 15 Lebanese and wounded nine in the town of Karak, near Zahle.

At least 23 Syrian refugees were also killed in the town of Younin in the Baalbek district.

An airstrike destroyed a residential house belonging to Turki Zeaiter in the town of Chaat, killing all members of the family.

A building near the home of Ali Youssef Hijazi, secretary-general of the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party, was struck, injuring several people. Hijazi was not at home at the time.

In the Bekaa towns, the cries of people buried under rubble could be heard, while paramedics were unable to reach damaged sites for hours due to heavy shelling.

People in the villages appealed via social media to officials and Hezbollah to provide relief to the victims.

Airstrikes destroyed homes in the towns of Nabi Sheet, and Khodor, Brital, Al-Bazzaliyah, and Doures, near Baalbek.

In the south, three people were killed in Aita Al-Shaab and a Syrian national was killed in Qana.

An airstrike killed three young men from the town of Halta while they were in their car.

The Lebanese Ministry of Health said that strikes on Tyre district towns on Thursday killed three people and injured 17.

After halting its attacks on Israel for 16 hours, Hezbollah resumed its strikes, launching dozens of rockets toward Acre and Haifa Bay.

The Israeli army warned settlers to “stay near shelters.”

It said that more than 45 rockets were fired from Lebanon, with some intercepted and others falling in open areas.

An Israeli army spokesman said that about 75 Hezbollah targets in the Bekaa and the south had been targeted, including weapons depots, rocket launchers, and military infrastructure.

Hezbollah said that it targeted the Rafael military manufacturing plant in the Zvulun area, north of Haifa, with salvos of rockets.

More than 70,000 people have been forced to flee southern Lebanon, with thousands more displaced from the Baalbek-Hermel region and towns in central Bekaa.

Many people have also left their homes in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Newly displaced people spoke of “neighborhoods emptied of their residents.”

Ibrahim, a father of two, told Arab News: “Everyone is scared, and we hope we will not stay displaced for long. No one asked us about our needs and the resources we have. We are trying to rent a house, but we can’t find a single vacant room in Beirut, so we turned to relatives.”

A total of 530 shelters have opened their doors in Beirut and various regions.

MP Bilal Abdullah, chairman of the parliamentary health committee, told Arab News: “The state is stumbling and confused in addressing the needs of the displaced and so is Hezbollah. The government’s emergency plan was excellent, but in terms of execution, it’s safe to say it’s at zero. People would be sleeping on the ground if it weren’t for personal initiatives.”

According to the Lebanese government, more than 600 people were killed and thousands wounded in the first three days of the war.


A friendly dance competition carries on an ancient Sahara festival tradition

Updated 11 July 2025
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A friendly dance competition carries on an ancient Sahara festival tradition

  • Sebeiba is a core tradition of the Tuareg people, native to the Sahara and parts of West Africa
  • The festival is a proud tradition of the Tuareg in Djanet. Some call it the Sebeiba celebration, or the ‘war dance without bloodshed’ or ‘the dance of peace’

DJANET, Algeria: In one hand, the dancers hold swords symbolizing battle. In the other, a piece of cloth symbolizing peace. They dance a shuffling “step-step” to the beat of drums and chanting from the women encircling them, all adorned in their finest traditional garments and jewelry.

They’re performing the rituals of the 3,000-year-old annual Sebeiba festival of Djanet, a southeastern Algerian oasis town deep in the Sahara, just over 200 km from the Libyan border.
Sebeiba is a core tradition of the Tuareg people, native to the Sahara and parts of West Africa. The Tuareg are Muslim, and their native language is Tamasheq, though many speak some combination of French, Modern Standard Arabic, Algerian Arabic (Darija) and English.
The festival lasts 10 days, and ends with a daylong dance competition between two neighborhoods in Djanet — Zelouaz, or Tsagit, and El Mihan, or Taghorfit. The winner is decided by judges from a third neighborhood, Adjahil, by selecting the group with the most beautiful costumes, dances, jewelry, poetry and songs.
The Tuaregs in Djanet say there are two legends explaining the significance of Sebeiba, though oral traditions vary. The first says the festival was put on to celebrate peace and joy after Moses defeated the Pharaoh in the Exodus story.
“In commemoration of this great historical event, when God saved Moses and his people from the tyranny of the oppressive Pharaoh, the people of Djanet came out and celebrated through dance,” said Ahmed Benhaoued, a Tuareg guide at his family’s tourism agency, Admer Voyages. He has lived in Djanet all his life.
The second legend says the festival commemorates the resolution of a historic rivalry between Zelouaz and El-Mihan.
“The festival is a proud tradition of the Tuareg in Djanet,” Benhaoued said. “Some call it ‘the Sebeiba celebration,’ or ‘the war dance without bloodshed’ or ‘the dance of peace.’”
Today, Sebeiba is also a point of cultural pride. Recognized by UNESCO since 2014 as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, Sebeiba coincides with Ashoura, a day marking the 10th day of Muharram, or the first month of the Islamic year. Some in Djanet fast for up to three days before Sebeiba.
This year, Ashoura and Sebeiba fell on July 6, when temperatures in Djanet reached about 38 C. Still, more than 1,000 people gathered to watch Sebeiba at a sandy square marking the center point between the two neighborhoods, where the festival is held each year.
Each group starts at one end of the square — Zelouaz to the north and El-Mihan to the south.
The dancers are young men from the neighborhoods dressed in dark robes accented by bright yellow, red and blue accessories and tall, maroon hats called Tkoumbout adorned with silver jewelry.
The men’s dances and women’s chants have been passed down through generations. Children participate in the festivities by mimicking the older performers. Boys brandish miniature swords and scarves in their small hands and girls stand with the female drummers.
This year, El-Mihan won the dance competition. But Cheikh Hassani, director of Indigenous Institutional Dance of Sebeiba, emphasized that despite the naming of a winner, the festival remains a friendly celebration — meant above all to honor their ancestors in a spirit of unity.
“Sebeiba is not just a dance,” Hassani said. “People used to think you just come, you dance — no, it represents so much more. For the people of Djanet, it’s a sort of sacred day.”
While the most widely known part of Sebeiba is the dance competition on the last day, the nine days leading up to it are also full of celebration. Tuareg from Libya and from other cities in the Algerian Sahara come to gatherings each night, when the temperature has cooled, to watch the performers rehearse.
Hassani said the generational inheritance of the festival’s customs helps them keep the spirits of their ancestors alive.
“We can’t let it go,” he said. “This is our heritage, and today it’s become a heritage of all humanity, an international heritage.”
According to legend, Benhaoued said, there will be winds and storms if Sebeiba is not held.
“It is said that this actually happened once when the festival was not held, so a woman went out into the streets with her drum, beating it until the storm calmed down,” the Tuareg guide added.
About 50 foreign tourists joined the people of Djanet for the final dance competition, hailing mostly from European countries such as France, Poland and Germany. Several also came from the neighboring countries of Libya and Niger.
Djanet is one of many Algerian cities experiencing an increase in tourism over the past two years, thanks to government efforts to boost the number of foreign visitors, especially to scenic sites like the Sahara, which makes up 83 percent of the North African country’s surface area.
The government introduced a new visa-on-arrival program in January 2023 for all nonexempt foreign tourists traveling to the Sahara. Additionally, the national airline, Air Algerie, launched a flight between Paris and Djanet in December 2024 during the winter season, when tourists from across the world travel to Djanet for camping excursions deep into the Sahara.
“The Sebeiba isn’t just something for the people of Djanet,” Hassani said. “We have the honor of preserving this heritage of humanity. That’s an honor for us.”

 


Child malnutrition doubles in battleground Sudan state

A child suffering from malnutrition eats ready-to-use food at a UNICEF-supported clinic in Tawila, North Darfur. (UNICEF)
Updated 11 July 2025
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Child malnutrition doubles in battleground Sudan state

  • Severe acute malnutrition rose by over 70 percent in neighboring North Kordofan state, by 174 percent in the capital Khartoum and nearly seven-fold in the central state of Al-Jazira

PORT SUDAN: The number of severely malnourished children in Sudan’s battleground state of North Darfur has doubled since last year, the UN children’s agency said on Friday.
Since April 2023, war between Sudan’s regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has killed tens of thousands of people and driven over 14 million from their homes.
North Darfur state and its besieged capital El-Fasher have been particularly badly hit, with famine declared last year in three vast displacement camps outside the city

HIGHLIGHT

UNICEF said more than 40,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition in North Darfur were admitted for treatment between January and May this year — twice as many as during the same period last year.

In a statement on Friday, UNICEF said more than 40,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition in North Darfur were admitted for treatment between January and May this year — twice as many as during the same period last year.
“Children in Darfur are being starved by conflict and cut off from the very aid that could save them,” said UNICEF’s Sudan representative, Sheldon Yett.
Across the five Darfur states, cases of severe acute malnutrition rose by 46 percent in the first five months of the year compared to the same period in 2024.
The battle for El-Fasher — the last major city in Darfur still under army control — has intensified in recent months.
Hospitals have been hit by shelling, aid convoys attacked and access for humanitarian aid is now almost entirely blocked.
The UN said this week that nearly 40 percent of children under five in El-Fasher were suffering from acute malnutrition, including 11 percent with severe acute malnutrition.
UNICEF also reported significant rises in malnutrition in other recent battlegrounds.
Severe acute malnutrition rose by over 70 percent in neighboring North Kordofan state, by 174 percent in the capital Khartoum and nearly seven-fold in the central state of Al-Jazira.
Khartoum and Al-Jazira were recaptured by the army earlier this year, but the country remains effectively split.
The army holds the east, north and center while the RSF controls nearly all of Darfur and parts of the south.

 


UN chief condemns renewed Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping

Updated 11 July 2025
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UN chief condemns renewed Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping

  • Secretary-General Antonio Guterres describes sinking of two Greek-owned vessels as ‘dangerous re-escalation in this critical waterway’

NEW YORK: Fresh attacks by Houthi militants on international shipping in the Red Sea are unacceptable and violate the freedom of navigation, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Friday. 

The Yemeni group resumed attacks on ships this week when it seized and sank two  vessels as they attempted to pass through the waterway linking the Mediterranean Sea with the Indian Ocean. Four seafarers are presumed dead and 11 others are still missing. 

The attacks were the first carried out by the group on international shipping for more than six months. In response to Israel’s war on Gaza, the militants attacked more than 100 vessels between November 2023 and December 2024, often using missiles and drones. 

The campaign forced shipping companies to reroute around Africa, adding significant time and costs to shipping goods between Asia and Europe.

Hopes that shipping through the waterway may be returning to normal were shattered last weekend when the Houthis attacked and sank the Magic Seas. All the crew were rescued.

Then on Monday, the group attacked the Eternity C before sinking it on Wednesday. Only 10 of the 25 aboard have been rescued. Both the ships flew Liberian flags and were operated by Greek companies.

Guterres “strongly condemned” the resumption of Houthi attacks on civilian vessels, his spokesman said.

“The sinking of both the Magic Seas and the Eternity C, along with the deaths of at least four crew members and injuries to others, is a dangerous re-escalation in this critical waterway,” he said.

The secretary-general called on the Houthis not to impede the ongoing search and rescue operations for the missing crew. 

“Beyond being an unacceptable attack on the safety and security of seafarers, these acts also violated the freedom of navigation, caused a hazard to maritime transport and represent a serious risk of a significant environmental, economic and humanitarian damage to an already vulnerable coastal environment,” he said.


EU pressing Israel to improve Gaza humanitarian situation, top diplomat says

Updated 11 July 2025
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EU pressing Israel to improve Gaza humanitarian situation, top diplomat says

  • EU’s diplomatic service presented 10 options for political action against Israel after it found “indications” Israel breached human rights obligations under pact
  • Foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas says the options were prepared in response to member states that want stronger pressure on Israel to rectify suffering of civilians in Gaza

KUALA LUMPUR: The European Union is seeking ways to put pressure on Israel to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza, its top diplomat said, as member states weighed action against Israel over what they see as potential human rights violations.
The EU’s diplomatic service on Thursday presented 10 options for political action against Israel after saying it found “indications” last month that Israel breached human rights obligations under a pact governing its ties with the bloc.
In a document prepared for EU member countries and seen by Reuters, the options included major steps such as suspending the EU-Israel Association Agreement — which includes trade relations — and lesser steps such as suspending technical projects.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Friday the options were prepared in response to member states that wanted stronger pressure on Israel to rectify the suffering of civilians in Gaza’s now 21-month-old war.
“Our aim is not to punish Israel in any way,” she said after meeting with Asian foreign ministers in Kuala Lumpur on Friday, amid growing global jitters arising from US President Donald Trump’s tariff offensive.
“Our aim is to really improve the situation on the ground (in Gaza), because the humanitarian situation is untenable.”
EU members have voiced concern over the large number of civilian casualties and mass displacement of Gaza’s inhabitants during Israel’s war against Hamas militants in the enclave, and alarm about restrictions on access for humanitarian aid.
Kallas said on Thursday Israel had agreed to expand humanitarian access to Gaza, including increasing the number of aid trucks, crossing points and routes to distribution hubs.
She also said negotiations with the US on a trade deal to avoid high tariffs threatened by Trump were ongoing, and stressed that the EU did not want to retaliate with counter-levies on US imports.
Trump has said the EU could receive a letter on tariff rates by Friday, throwing into question the progress of talks between Washington and the bloc on a potential trade deal.
“We have of course possibilities to react, but we don’t want to retaliate. We don’t want a trade war, actually,” Kallas said.


Lebanese president rules out normalization with Israel

Updated 11 July 2025
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Lebanese president rules out normalization with Israel

  • Joseph Aoun calls on Israel to withdraw from the five points near the border it still occupies in southern Lebanon
  • He expressed hope for peaceful relations with Israel in the future

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun ruled out normalization between his country and Israel on Friday, while expressing hope for peaceful relations with Beirut’s southern neighbor, which still occupies parts of southern Lebanon.

Aoun’s statement is the first official reaction to Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar’s statement last week in which he expressed his country’s interest in normalizing ties with Lebanon and Syria.

Aoun “distinguished between peace and normalization,” according to a statement shared by the presidency.

“Peace is the lack of a state of war, and this is what matters to us in Lebanon at the moment. As for the issue of normalization, it is not currently part of Lebanese foreign policy,” the president said in front of a delegation from an Arab think tank.

Lebanon and Syria have technically been in a state of war with Israel since 1948, with Damascus saying that talks of normalization were “premature.”

The president called on Israel to withdraw from the five points near the border it still occupies. Israel was required to fully withdraw from southern Lebanon under a November ceasefire seeking to end its war with Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Aoun said that Israeli troops in Lebanon “obstruct the complete deployment of the army up to the internationally recognized borders.”

According to the ceasefire agreement, Hezbollah must pull its fighters north of the Litani River, around 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the border with Israel, leaving the Lebanese army and UN peacekeepers as the only armed parties in the area.

The United States has been calling on Lebanon to fully disarm Hezbollah, and Lebanese authorities sent their response to Washington’s demand this week.

The response was not made public, but Aoun stated that Beirut was determined to “hold the monopoly over weapons in the country.”

The implementation of this move “will take into account the interest of the state and its security stability to preserve civil peace on one hand, and national unity on the other,” hinting that Hezbollah’s disarmament will not be done through force.

Hezbollah, a powerful political force in Lebanon, is the only non-state actor to have officially retained its weaponry after the end of Lebanon’s 15-year civil war in 1990, as parts of southern Lebanon were still under Israeli occupation at the time.

The Lebanese group was heavily weakened following its year-long hostilities with Israel, which escalated into a two-month war in September.