Israel says it bombed Hezbollah arms depots in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley

Update A view shows smoke and fire in the Lebanese village of Byout El Saiyad amid cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as pictured from Tyre, Lebanon August 19, 2024. (REUTERS)
A view shows smoke and fire in the Lebanese village of Byout El Saiyad amid cross-border hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as pictured from Tyre, Lebanon August 19, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 21 August 2024

Israel says it bombed Hezbollah arms depots in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley

Israel says it bombed Hezbollah arms depots in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley
  • Lebanon’s health ministry said three emergency personnel from the Hezbollah-affiliated Islamic Health Committee were hurt when the Israeli military “targeted them” in south Lebanon, causing “significant damage to the ambulance they were traveling in”

JERUSALEM/BEIRUT: The Israeli military said on Wednesday that it bombed Hezbollah weapons storage facilities in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley overnight, its latest strike on arms depots in a major stronghold of the powerful Iranian-backed militia.
The air attack came hours after Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said that “attacking munitions warehouses in Lebanon is preparation for anything that might happen.”
Hezbollah said it had retaliated for the strike on the Bekaa region by firing Katyusha rockets at an Israeli military logistics site in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.
Hezbollah and the Israeli military have been locked in hostilities for the last 10 months in parallel with the Gaza war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas, which has spread to several other fronts and prompted fears of an all-out Middle East conflict.
While most of the exchanges of fire have played out along Lebanon’s volatile southern border with Israel, some Israeli strikes have occurred deeper into Lebanon, including the Bekaa Valley, which borders Syria.
There was no immediate confirmation from security sources in Lebanon that weapons depots were targeted on Tuesday. The sources said the strike was in a residential area near the eastern city of Baalbek in the Bekaa, an area populated mainly by Shiite Muslims from whom Hezbollah draws its support.
The airstrikes left at least two people dead and 19 injured, according to the security sources, but it was not immediately clear if those killed were civilians or fighters.
Another Israeli airstrike on Wednesday hit a car on the outskirts of the southern port city of Sidon, killing a member of the armed wing of the Palestinian faction Fatah, two Palestinian sources told Reuters.
Israel has regularly bombed Hezbollah fighters and rocket launch sites in south Lebanon. More than 600 people in Lebanon have been killed since the start of the clashes last October, including more than 400 Hezbollah combatants and 132 civilians, according to a Reuters toll.
Targeting arms depots has picked up more recently.
On Saturday, the Israeli military said it targeted a weapons depot used by Hezbollah militants in an airstrike. Lebanon’s state news agency said at least 10 Syrian nationals, including two children, were killed in this incident.
Another airstrike late on Monday hit a Hezbollah weapons depot in the Bekaa region.
In July, Israel bombed another depot storing ammunition belonging to Hezbollah in the town of Adloun in south Lebanon, three security sources told Reuters.


Lebanon says Israeli strike kills five, wounds 10

Lebanon says Israeli strike kills five, wounds 10
Updated 10 sec ago

Lebanon says Israeli strike kills five, wounds 10

Lebanon says Israeli strike kills five, wounds 10
The Israeli strike on Masnaa Road resulted in a preliminary toll of five deaths

BEIRUT: Lebanon said an Israeli strike on the country’s east on Thursday killed at least five people, in the latest attack despite a November ceasefire in a war with militant group Hezbollah.

“The Israeli strike on Masnaa Road resulted in a preliminary toll of five deaths and ten injuries,” the Lebanese health ministry said in a statement. The state-run National News Agency reported that the strike hit a vehicle in the area, near a border crossing with Syria.

The reported strike came as Lebanon’s government was discussing Hezbollah’s disarmament.

US envoy hails ‘historic’ Lebanon decision on Hezbollah disarmament

US envoy hails ‘historic’ Lebanon decision on Hezbollah disarmament
Updated 10 min 18 sec ago

US envoy hails ‘historic’ Lebanon decision on Hezbollah disarmament

US envoy hails ‘historic’ Lebanon decision on Hezbollah disarmament
  • “This week’s Cabinet resolutions finally put into motion the ‘One Nation, One Army’ solution for Lebanon,” Barrack said

BEIRUT: US envoy Tom Barrack said on Thursday Lebanon’s government had taken a “historic” decision this week by moving to disarm Iran-backed group Hezbollah, which Washington has pushed for.


In a post on X, Barrack congratulated Lebanese leaders “for making the historic, bold, and correct decision this week to begin fully implementing” a November ceasefire which ended more than a year of hostilities between Hezbollah and neighboring Israel, and stipulated that weapons in Lebanon be restricted to government agencies only.

“This week’s Cabinet resolutions finally put into motion the ‘One Nation, One Army’ solution for Lebanon. We stand behind the Lebanese people,” Barrack said.


The Paris office of Israeli airline El Al is vandalized with graffiti

The Paris office of Israeli airline El Al is vandalized with graffiti
Updated 33 min 57 sec ago

The Paris office of Israeli airline El Al is vandalized with graffiti

The Paris office of Israeli airline El Al is vandalized with graffiti
  • Red paint and the words “El Al genocide airline” were discovered Thursday morning on the door outside the airline’s office
  • The airline said it was handling the matter with the “utmost gravity”

PARIS: The Israeli airline El Al said Thursday that its Paris office was vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti, calling the act a “deeply disturbing” incident as tensions between France and Israel run high.

Red paint and the words “El Al genocide airline” were discovered Thursday morning on the door outside the airline’s office in the center of the French capital. El Al said that no one was in the office at the time of the incident and that no one was harmed.

The airline said it was handling the matter with the “utmost gravity” and working in close coordination with authorities in France and Israel. El Al added it “unequivocally condemns all forms of violence, particularly those driven by hatred,” and said its planes “proudly” display the Israeli flag.

French authorities announced that they opened opened an investigation into building “degradation” with a racist or ethnically prejudicial intent.

Israeli Transportation Minister Miri Regev condemned the act and blamed the policies of French President Emmanuel Macron. “Today it’s El Al, tomorrow it’s Air France,” she wrote on social media. “When President Macron makes announcements that give gifts to Hamas, this is the result.”

The incident comes amid diplomatic friction following Macron’s pledge last month to recognize a Palestinian state — a move welcomed by some European allies but strongly opposed by Israel.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry also condemned what it called an antisemitic attack and urged the French government to ensure the safety of El Al staff and offices and to bring the perpetrators to justice.

In May, several Jewish sites across Paris were defaced with green paint, including the Shoah Memorial, three synagogues and a Jewish restaurant.

France is home to Western Europe’s largest Jewish population, with an estimated 500,000 Jews — approximately 1 percent of the national population.

In recent years, antisemitic incidents have surged, with a sharp increase reported in 2023 after the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks in Israel. These include physical assaults, threats, vandalism, and harassment, prompting alarm among Jewish communities and leaders.


GHF aid distribution sites in Gaza becoming ‘laboratories of cruelty,’ says medical charity

GHF aid distribution sites in Gaza becoming ‘laboratories of cruelty,’ says medical charity
Updated 07 August 2025

GHF aid distribution sites in Gaza becoming ‘laboratories of cruelty,’ says medical charity

GHF aid distribution sites in Gaza becoming ‘laboratories of cruelty,’ says medical charity
  • Scathing new report claims locations centers of ‘orchestrated killing’

LONDON: Doctors Without Borders has accused a controversial aid initiative in Gaza of enabling the systematic targeting and killing of civilians, it was reported on Thursday.

In a scathing new report, the medical charity — also known by its French acronym MSF— said aid distribution centers run by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation had become sites of “orchestrated killing.”

Raquel Ayora, one of the charity’s general directors, said: “In MSF’s nearly 54 years of operations, rarely have we seen such levels of systematic violence against unarmed civilians.

“The GHF distribution sites masquerading as ‘aid’ have morphed into a laboratory of cruelty. This must stop now.”

The group is calling for GHF’s operations to be scrapped immediately and replaced with a UN-led system. It has urged governments and donors to “suspend all financial and political support for the GHF.”

, the channel contacted both the GHF and the Israel Defense Forces for comment. In an interview on Wednesday, IDF spokesperson Nadav Shoshani dismissed the allegations, claiming: “I think that is completely false,” and described some reports of shootings as “fake news.”

Between June 7 and July 24, MSF says it treated 1,380 people wounded near GHF aid sites at two of its clinics.

Among the injured were 71 children, 25 of them under the age of 15. The charity said 28 people were dead on arrival.

Among the cases were an 8-year-old girl shot in the chest, and a 12-year-old boy hit in the abdomen. The charity described several injuries as precise and deliberate.

“The distinct patterns and anatomical precision of these injuries strongly suggests the intentional targeting of people within and around the distribution sites, rather than accidental or indiscriminate fire,” the report stated.

Gunshot wounds recorded at MSF’s Al-Mawasi Clinic showed 11 percent struck victims in the head or neck, while 19 percent were to the torso. In Khan Younis, injuries to the lower limbs were more common.

One patient, Mohammed Riad Tabasi, said: “We’re being slaughtered. I’ve been injured maybe 10 times. I saw it with my own eyes, about 20 corpses around me; all of them shot in the head (and) in the stomach.”

The report also documented 196 injuries caused by stampedes or chaos during aid distribution. One woman died of likely asphyxiation in a crush. Others, MSF said, were beaten or robbed after receiving food.

The GHF took over much of Gaza’s aid provision in May after Israel ended an 11-week blockade. But the operation has drawn mounting international criticism. A previous Sky News investigation linked GHF-led aid drops to spikes in fatalities, and UN officials have condemned the system as “death traps.”

UN experts this week called the program “an utterly disturbing example of how humanitarian relief can be exploited for covert military and geopolitical agendas in serious breach of international law.”

They reiterated calls for Israel to restore access for UN agencies and humanitarian nongovernmental organizations.

MSF echoed the demand and directly urged the US to end its support.

“Despite the condemnations and calls for dismantling it, the global inaction to stop GHF is baffling,” said Aitor Zabalgogeazkoa, MSF’s emergency coordinator.

The IDF maintains that humanitarian access is not being obstructed. “There is no limit of aid getting into Gaza,” Shoshani said. “Every day, hundreds of trucks go into Gaza.”

Israeli officials argue the GHF model prevents supplies being stolen by Hamas and ensures they reach civilians directly. Steve Witkoff, the US’ special envoy to the Middle East, last week toured one of the sites.

“We’re putting up money to get the people fed,” US President Donald Trump declared at the same time.


Trump: Important that Middle Eastern countries join Abraham Accords

Trump: Important that Middle Eastern countries join Abraham Accords
Updated 07 August 2025

Trump: Important that Middle Eastern countries join Abraham Accords

Trump: Important that Middle Eastern countries join Abraham Accords
  • Efforts to expand the accords have been complicated by a soaring death toll and starvation in Gaza
  • The war in Gaza has provoked global anger

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday it was important that Middle Eastern countries join the Abraham Accords, which aim to normalize diplomatic ties with Israel, saying it will ensure peace in the region.

“Now that the nuclear arsenal being ‘created’ by Iran has been totally OBLITERATED, it is very important to me that all Middle Eastern Countries join the Abraham Accords,” Trump wrote in a social media post.

As part of the Abraham Accords, signed during Trump’s first term in office, four Muslim-majority countries agreed to normalize diplomatic relations with Israel after US mediation.

Efforts to expand the accords have been complicated by a soaring death toll and starvation in Gaza.

The war in Gaza, where local authorities say more than 60,000 people have died, has provoked global anger. Canada, France and the United Kingdom have announced plans in recent days to recognize an independent Palestinian state.

Trump’s administration is actively discussing with Azerbaijan the possibility of bringing that nation and some Central Asian allies into the Abraham Accords, hoping to deepen their existing ties with Israel, according to five sources with knowledge of the matter.