Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex

Update Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
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A picture shows destruction due to an Israeli airstrike a day earlier on the Haret Hreik neighborhood in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Oct. 23, 2024. (AFP)
Update Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
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Flame and smoke rises from buildings hit by Israeli airstrikes on Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, on Oct. 23, 2024. (AP)
Update Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
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Flame and smoke rises from buildings hit by Israeli airstrikes on Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, on Oct. 23, 2024. (AP)
Update Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
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Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted a residential complex in the Leylaki neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on October 23, 2024. (AFP)
Update Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
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Flame and smoke rises from buildings hit by Israeli airstrikes on Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, on Oct. 23, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 24 October 2024
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Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex

Israel pounds Beirut, levels residential complex
  • Six buildings levelled in at least 17 Israeli raids, marking one of the most brutal nights in the capital’s southern suburbs
  • Raids came after top US diplomat Antony Blinken visited Israel and asked to avoid further escalation with Iran

BEIRUT: Israel unleashed a wave of air strikes on Hezbollah’s southern Beirut stronghold on Wednesday night, Lebanese state media said, as the Iran-Hezbollah war reached its one-month mark.
With six buildings levelled in at least 17 Israeli raids, the strikes mark one of the most brutal nights in the capital’s southern suburbs since the war erupted on September 23.
Separately, Syria’s state media reported Israeli air strikes on a residential building in Damascus and a military site in Homs that killed a soldier and wounded seven others.
The raids came after United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken, on a visit to Israel, told the US ally to avoid further escalation with Iran.
Israel is fighting Iran-backed Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon and has vowed to retaliate against Iran for an October 1 missile attack.
In Lebanon, the official National News Agency reported at least 17 Israeli strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, calling the raids “the most violent in the area since the beginning of the war.”
Six buildings were destroyed around the suburb of Laylaki, NNA said, including a residential complex hit by four Israeli strikes “causing a large fire.”

 

AFPTV footage showed a massive explosion followed by smaller blasts in the embattled suburb after the Israeli army issued an Arabic-language evacuation warning for the area, where Hezbollah holds sway.
There was no warning, however, for a strike that hit the Jnah neighborhood in southern Beirut.
That strike killed one person and wounded five others, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.

In southern Lebanon, Israeli strikes pounded Tyre, leaving swaths of its center in ruins and sparking a new exodus from the once vibrant coastal city.
“The whole city shook,” said resident Rana, who fled to the seafront after the Israeli military issued an evacuation warning.
Bilal Kashmar of Tyre’s disaster management unit said seven buildings were levelled and more than 400 apartments damaged.
“You could say that the entire city of Tyre is being evacuated,” he told AFP.

 

Black smoke was seen rising from several neighborhoods, with some areas just 500 meters (550 yards) from the city’s ancient ruins.
UNESCO said it was “closely following” the conflict’s impact on Tyre’s World Heritage site.
Blinken’s visit to the region, his 11th since the Gaza war began, was part of continued US efforts to end the war and limit its regional fallout.

The Gaza war began with Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,206 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed 42,792 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, data which the UN considers reliable.
Blinken said Israel had “achieved most of its strategic objectives” in Gaza and should now aim for lasting success.
“Now is the time to turn those successes into enduring, strategic success,” he said after meetings with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top officials.

 

Addressing Israel’s pledge to retaliate for Iran’s October 1 attack, he said: “It’s also very important that Israel respond in ways that do not create greater escalation.”
After Israel, Blinken visited Saudi Arabia, renewing his bid to broker a normalization of diplomatic ties between the two countries.
Speaking at a summit in Russia, Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian urged BRICS nations to help “end the war” in Gaza and Lebanon.
A Hamas official said a delegation led by a top official in the movement arrived in Moscow for talks.

Concerns are mounting over tens of thousands of civilians trapped by fighting in Gaza’s aid-starved north, where Israel launched a major air and ground assault this month.
Blinken acknowledged “progress” on aid for Gaza but said more needed to be done.
With winter approaching, displaced Gazans fear the cold.
Ahmad Al-Razz said he sewed sacks together to make his tent on the beach near Deir el-Balah.
“We are freezing every night because we are right by the sea, and we have no blankets or coverings to keep us warm,” said the 42-year-old.
The World Health Organization said it was forced to postpone the last phase of a polio vaccination drive in Gaza due to “intense bombardment” in the north.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said another of its workers had been killed in Gaza after a strike hit an UNRWA vehicle.
An AFP photographer reported a strike in the southern city of Khan Yunis, leaving a mangled aid truck and mourners gathered around two bodies.

After nearly a year of war with Hamas in Gaza, Israel shifted its focus to Lebanon last month, vowing to secure its northern border under fire from Hezbollah.
Israel has since ramped up its strikes on Hezbollah strongholds and sent in ground forces, in a war that has killed at least 1,580 people since September 23, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry figures.
The real number is likely to be higher due to gaps in the data.
Lebanese media said Israeli strikes hit areas of south and east Lebanon on Wednesday.
In the evening, pro-Iran broadcaster Al-Mayadeen said an Israeli strike hit an office it had vacated in Beirut.
Hezbollah said it had fired rockets in several areas of Israel, including a salvo that forced Israeli troops to “retreat behind the frontier” after they attempted to infiltrate from the outskirts of the south Lebanon village of Aitarun.
The Israeli army said air raid sirens sounded across central Israel after “projectiles” were fired from across the Lebanese border.
Netanyahu said on Wednesday that Israel had uncovered that Hezbollah had been plotting an “attack even greater than on October 7” involving jeeps, missiles and underground tunnels.
“They were planning an invasion,” the premier told French broadcasters CNews and Europe 1.
Also on Wednesday, Hezbollah confirmed the death of Hashem Safieddine, a cleric tipped to succeed the group’s slain leader Hassan Nasrallah, a day after Israel announced Safieddine’s death.
A Western diplomat meanwhile told AFP a number of Western countries had floated the idea of deploying international forces to Lebanon in the event of a ceasefire.
About 10,000 UN peacekeepers are already deployed in Lebanon’s south, but the diplomat said a separate multi-national troop deployment was under consideration.
 

 


Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah

Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah
Updated 3 sec ago
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Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah

Palestinian president meets British FM in Ramallah
  • Mahmoud Abbas briefed David Lammy on Israeli aggression in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem

LONDON: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas received British Foreign Secretary David Lammy on Monday at the Palestinian Authority’s headquarters in Ramallah.

Abbas discussed with Lammy the need to implement UN Security Council Resolution 2735, which calls for a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from the coastal enclave.

He highlighted the UK’s backing for the efforts to gain international recognition of the State of Palestine and its full membership in the UN, as part of the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

He briefed Lammy on the latest Israeli aggressions in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, the WAFA news agency reported.


Lebanon president, US general discuss Hezbollah-Israel truce

Lebanon’s new President Joseph Aoun (L) receives Lt. Gen. Michael Kurilla (2nd-R), commander of the US Central Command.
Lebanon’s new President Joseph Aoun (L) receives Lt. Gen. Michael Kurilla (2nd-R), commander of the US Central Command.
Updated 6 min 3 sec ago
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Lebanon president, US general discuss Hezbollah-Israel truce

Lebanon’s new President Joseph Aoun (L) receives Lt. Gen. Michael Kurilla (2nd-R), commander of the US Central Command.
  • Kurilla and Aoun spoke about “the situation in the south and the stages of implementing the Israeli withdrawal from the south,” the presidency said

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s president and a top US general discussed on Monday the implementation of a fragile truce between Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Israel in the south of the country, the presidency said.
President Joseph Aoun and the head of US Central Command, General Michael Kurilla, met as a January 26 deadline to fully implement the terms of the ceasefire approached.
Kurilla and Aoun spoke about “the situation in the south and the stages of implementing the Israeli withdrawal from the south,” the presidency said.
Under the November 27 ceasefire accord, the Lebanese army has 60 days to deploy alongside UN peacekeepers in the south of Lebanon as the Israeli army withdraws.
At the same time, Hezbollah is required to pull its forces north of the Litani River, some 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the border, and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure it has in the country’s south.
A committee composed of Israeli, Lebanese, French and US delegates, alongside a representative from the UN peacekeeping force, has been tasked with monitoring the implementation of the deal.
Former army chief Aoun was elected head of state on Thursday by lawmakers — a vote that followed the weakening of Hamas in the war — ending a more than two-year deadlock during which the position was vacant.
Aoun and Kurilla also discussed “ways to activate cooperation between the Lebanese and American armies,” the presidency said.
The United States has been a key financial backer of the Lebanese armed forces, especially since the country’s economy collapsed in 2019.
Meanwhile, Israel carried out air strikes in east and south Lebanon on Sunday, with the Israeli military saying it struck Hezbollah targets including smuggling routes along the border with Syria.
Israeli strikes in south Lebanon on Friday killed five people, according to the Lebanese health ministry, with the Israeli military saying it targeted a Hezbollah weapons truck.


Angry hostage families harangue Israeli hard-liner Smotrich

Supporters of hostages kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas protest during a Finance Committee meeting.
Supporters of hostages kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas protest during a Finance Committee meeting.
Updated 32 min 17 sec ago
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Angry hostage families harangue Israeli hard-liner Smotrich

Supporters of hostages kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas protest during a Finance Committee meeting.
  • Smotrich described the deal taking shape as “a catastrophe” for Israel’s security
  • He said Israel should keep up its campaign in Gaza until the complete surrender of Hamas

JERUSALEM: Angry members of some of the families of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza harangued Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Monday over his opposition to a deal being negotiated in Qatar to halt the fighting and bring their relatives home.
Smotrich described the deal taking shape as “a catastrophe” for Israel’s security and said Israel should keep up its campaign in Gaza until the complete surrender of Hamas, the militant group that ran the enclave before the war.
Dozens of members of the hostage families, many carrying photographs of the missing, squeezed into a committee room in the Israeli parliament where a meeting of the finance committee was held to examine the 2025 budget.
Some furious, some crying and pleading, they attacked Smotrich in an emotionally charged encounter that lasted for more than an hour, accusing him of abandoning the 98 Israeli and foreign hostages still left in Gaza.
“These kidnapped people can be returned,” Ofir Angrest, whose brother Matan was taken hostage during the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
“The conditions are ripe, it’s time for a deal, the Prime Minister said it. How can you, the Minister of Finance, oppose the return of all these abductees?“
Smotrich, leader of one of the hard-line nationalist religious parties in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition, has been among the loudest opponents of a deal which he described as a “surrender” to Hamas.
Qatar, which is brokering the talks alongside Egypt and the United States, said it had given a draft agreement to both Israel and Hamas following a “breakthrough” overnight.
Yechiel Yehud, whose daughter Arbel was kidnapped from Kibbutz Nir Oz and whose son Dolev was killed, reminded Smotrich that he had visited their home in the kibbutz.
“I know your heart is in the right place, but you are required to do more than that,” he said.


Power outages in Sudan after drone attack on major dam

Power outages in Sudan after drone attack on major dam
Updated 50 min 24 sec ago
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Power outages in Sudan after drone attack on major dam

Power outages in Sudan after drone attack on major dam

PORT SUDAN: The seat of Sudan’s army-aligned government was without power on Monday, AFP correspondents said, after a drone attack blamed on paramilitaries hit a major hydroelectric dam in the war-torn country’s north.
The Sudanese army, at war with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) since April 2023, said in a statement that the attack on Merowe Dam was part of a “systematic campaign” against military sites but also targeting “vital” infrastructure.
AFP journalists in Port Sudan on the Red Sea, where the army-aligned government and the United Nations have been based since the war’s early days, said widespread power outages have persisted since early Monday.
The army said that Merowe Dam and its power station, located about 350 kilometers (220 miles) north of the capital Khartoum and serving Port Sudan and other areas, were hit by “a number of suicide drones.”
“Some losses were incurred, which will be repaired,” the army statement said.
Online footage, which AFP could not independently verify, showed fires engulfing the dam’s electrical infrastructure.
The RSF did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment.
Since the early morning attack, local media said that the army-controlled cities of Atbara, Dongola and Omdurman — across the Nile from Khartoum — have also been hit by power outages.
In November last year, the army accused the RSF of targeting Merowe with 16 drones, though no casualties or significant damage were reported at the time.
The dam is one of Sudan’s biggest sources of hydroelectric power.
Merowe city, in Sudan’s Northern State, is also home to a major military airport.
The latest attack came two days after the army recaptured Wad Madani, the capital of the central state of Al-Jazira, after more than a year of paramilitary control.
In addition to decimating Sudan’s already fragile infrastructure, the war has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people, uprooted more than 12 million and pushed many Sudanese to the brink of famine.


Celebrations in Sudan’s Wad Madani as army takes over strategic city

Celebrations in Sudan’s Wad Madani as army takes over strategic city
Updated 13 January 2025
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Celebrations in Sudan’s Wad Madani as army takes over strategic city

Celebrations in Sudan’s Wad Madani as army takes over strategic city
  • More than 12 million displaced in nearly two years of war
  • Army’s recapture of Wad Madani boosts morale, squeezes RSF
  • RSF denies accusations of abuses in El Gezira

WAD MADANI: Civilians and soldiers celebrated in Wad Madani, the capital of Sudan’s El Gezira state, after it was recaptured by the Sudanese army from the paramilitary Rapid Support Services, marking a possible turning point in a devastating near two-year civil war.
“We are so happy, we can’t express ourselves,” said one woman on Sunday, as soldiers shot into the air and people cheered on the streets. “A whole year we have been squeezed, we haven’t been able to breathe.”
The war began in the capital Khartoum in April 2023 over the integration of the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Services (RSF). It has created one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises, pushing more than 12 million people out of their homes, and plunging half of the population into hunger.
The RSF’s occupation of El Gezira turned the fertile state into one at risk of famine. Its tight-knit villages were emptied out by violent raids as fields lay fallow or were set on fire, residents and eyewitnesses have said.
The RSF denies the accusations and says it is fighting rogue actors who are committing abuses.
The army’s ability to regain full control of the state would be pivotal in its attempts to choke the RSF’s supply lines to Khartoum and the army-controlled eastern half of the country. The RSF still controls most of the capital.

MORALE BOOST
“The SAF’s capture of Wad Madani boosts its own morale and puts large RSF contingents at risk of encirclement in the area,” said Jalel Harchaoui, an associate fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute.
“It also frees the SAF to intensify pressure on Khartoum before potentially shifting its focus westward,” he said, while warning that the RSF could launch a counteroffensive on Al-Fashir, the army’s last remaining holdout in the western Darfur region.
“This is a big victory that we thank God for, but we are not stopping, we are going swiftly, we are in a hurry, and God-willing soon every inch of Sudan will be cleansed,” General Shams el-Din Kabbashi, deputy leader of the armed forces, told troops and civilians in Madani.
The bodies of RSF soldiers could be seen on the road and bridge leading into the city, but eyewitnesses reported few clashes inside Madani.
The relatively swift takeover comes after weeks of advances by the army in surrounding villages, newly equipped in recent months with fresh armaments and new recruits to allied forces.

HELPED BY DEFECTORS

The Joint Forces, a collection of former rebel groups, as well as Sudan Shield, led by RSF defector Abuagla Keikal, participated in the assault.
The RSF chose to withdraw after being overwhelmed in the lead-up to the takeover, sources in the paramilitary said. They added that its soldiers were exhausted by airstrikes and by dwindling stocks of ammunition and supplies.
They withdrew northwards toward other towns in the state and Khartoum, eyewitnesses said, chased by army airstrikes.
Fiercer fighting could be expected as the RSF fights to maintain control of Khartoum, where the army has made gains, the RSF sources said.
Many of the paramilitary’s fighters come from militias and tribal groups outside of Gezira and had little will to fight for the country’s center, the RSF sources added.
Residents said there had been extensive looting.
“If we have just 1000 pounds ($0.40) they tell us to hand it over. They exhausted and humiliated us,” said lawyer Ahmed Abdelqadir, who along with other women and children cheered for the SAF soldiers as they drove through the town.
The paramilitary soldiers who roamed through the town raided homes and killed the residents if they didn’t find anything, she said.
“They left us with nothing.”