Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon

Update Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon
There was no sign of an immediate exodus from the villages of southern Lebanon. (AFP)
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Updated 24 September 2024

Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon

Nearly 500 killed as Israel bombards Lebanon
  • Israel starts ‘war of extermination against Lebanon’ amid displacement of people in south and Bekaa
  • Lebanese PM urges UN and world powers to deter Israel’s ‘destructive plan’

BEIRUT: Israeli airstrikes killed at least 490 people, including children, in Lebanon on Monday, the Health Ministry said, in what is by far the deadliest cross-border escalation since war erupted in Gaza on Oct. 7.

Monday’s confrontations between Hezbollah and the Israeli army entered a new phase of violence, disregarding all red lines.

The Litani River no longer served as a boundary to Israeli expansion northward.

According to the Lebanese Health Ministry’s health emergency center, the initial toll from more than 350 Israeli airstrikes on southern Lebanon and the Bekaa region was 356 dead and 1,246 wounded, including children, women, and paramedics.

The battle, which Hezbollah calls the “open-ended battle of reckoning,” has ignited Lebanon from the south to the east, with the Israeli army launching a series of wide-ranging air attacks early in the morning.

Dozens of warplanes simultaneously targeted residential homes, the squares of populated towns, valleys, and forests.

The Israeli military claimed that Hezbollah “uses civilian homes and private civilian facilities as hideouts to launch rockets,” similar to the war scenario in the Gaza Strip.

Israeli army spokesperson Daniel Hagari said that “Hezbollah is hiding guided missiles inside civilian homes.” Meanwhile, an advisor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu noted: “Hezbollah used Iranian drones against Israel.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said that Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah had turned the people of Lebanon into “hostages, placing rockets and weapons inside their homes and towns to threaten Israel’s home front.”

He said the people of Lebanon should evacuate “any house that has become a site for the service of the Hezbollah organization to avoid harm.”

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said that the ongoing Israeli “aggression against Lebanon constitutes a genocide in every sense of the word, as well as a destructive plan aimed at annihilating villages and towns and eradicating all green spaces.”

He reiterated his appeal to “decision-making countries to exert pressure on Israel to cease its aggression, implement UN Security Council resolution 2735, and resolve the Palestinian issue based on the adoption of the two-state solution and a just and comprehensive peace.”

He said: “We reaffirm our full commitment to resolution 1701 and, as a government, we are working to halt the renewed Israeli war while striving to avoid, as much as possible, falling into the unknown.”

Mikati spoke as the Israeli army launched on Monday morning a series of large-scale attacks from Lebanon’s south to east.

The army vowed to target sites deep in the Bekaa Valley in the afternoon.

Dozens of towns in the border region and in the area of Tyre were targeted by airstrikes.

The Israeli army hit a home housing seven people in the town of Barich in the Tyre district, killing five people, including children.

It also targeted the Nabatieh area, western Bekaa (specifically Machghara, Sohmor, and Yohmor), as well as the Jezzine area and Deir Al-Zahrani, all the way to Maghdoucheh and Ghaziyeh on the outskirts of Sidon.

The echoes of Israeli airstrikes on northern Bekaa resonated throughout the region.

People spoke of “highly destructive Israeli missiles.”

Loud explosions shook the Hermel highlands near the Syrian border.

A strike on these highlands killed one person and injured six others, two of whom are in intensive care.

Injured children were separated from their families upon being transferred to hospitals, prompting appeals for anyone with information about their relatives to come forward.

Women who were in their homes were buried under the rubble.

Calls were made through social media for nurses to report to hospitals that had exceeded their capacity to assist in providing care to those in need.

The Ministry of Health has requested that “all hospitals in the southern provinces, as well as in Nabatieh and Baalbek-Hermel, suspend all non-urgent procedures to allocate resources for the treatment of casualties resulting from the ongoing Israeli aggression against Lebanon.”

Israeli media reported that some airstrikes penetrated as deep as 125 km into Lebanese territory.

The Israeli Broadcasting Authority said that the air force “attacked the northern Lebanon Valley area, about 130 km from Israel’s northern border.”

The Israeli army accompanied its aggression with recorded voice messages to Lebanese cell phones in various areas, especially the south and Bekaa, extending to Beirut and Akkar in the north.

The messages urged people to evacuate homes near Hezbollah centers.

The telecom company Ogero reported that Lebanon received “about 80,000 suspected Israeli call attempts.”

The messages instructed people to “evacuate areas where Hezbollah weapons or infrastructure are located within at least 1,000 meters, or head to the local school and not return until further notice.”

The warning was echoed by a similar statement from the Israeli army’s spokesperson, addressing “villages in the Bekaa region.”

The airstrikes and phone threats had an immediate effect, as schools halted operations and urged parents to pick up their children.

Many families quickly fled from southern areas, which until recently were considered safe, heading deeper into Lebanon.

The entrance to Sidon, leading to Beirut, was jammed with thousands of cars carrying families and their belongings.

Displaced people have moved from the south to the predominantly Christian and Druze areas of Mount Lebanon, as well as to Beirut, which has a Sunni majority.

Additionally, some displaced persons have arrived in Akkar, located in the far north of Lebanon, where efforts have been made to provide them with housing.

The spokesperson for the Israeli army, Avichay Adraee, claimed that the military targeted “only the buildings that contain weapons belonging to Hezbollah.”

He addressed the residents of Lebanese villages, asking them to evacuate the homes where Hezbollah had concealed weapons immediately.

He said Hezbollah “is deceiving you and sacrificing you. While Hezbollah claims that you are part of its community and its supporters, it appears that its missiles and drones are more valuable and significant to it than you are.”

Reports on Monday indicated that an Israeli missile fell in a barren area in the Jbeil district in northern Lebanon, predominantly inhabited by Christians, with a Shiite presence.

The Lebanese army investigated the incident, and security sources suggested that the missile might have landed accidentally in the area.

UNIFIL, the UN’s peacekeeping force in Lebanon, asked all its civilian employees to leave with their families to safe areas north of the Litani River.

In response to the Israeli attack, Hezbollah said it “bombed the reserve headquarters of the Israeli army’s northern corps, the Galilee Division Reserve Base, and its stores of logistics at Ami’ad Base as well as Rafael’s military-industrial complexes in Zevulun area, north of Haifa, with dozens of missiles.”

Sirens sounded in Margaliot in the Upper Galilee, as reported by Israeli media.


Munitions blast in Hezbollah site kills 5 Lebanese troops: military source

Munitions blast in Hezbollah site kills 5 Lebanese troops: military source
Updated 9 sec ago

Munitions blast in Hezbollah site kills 5 Lebanese troops: military source

Munitions blast in Hezbollah site kills 5 Lebanese troops: military source

Microsoft investigates ties with IDF after investigation reveals mass surveillance program

Microsoft investigates ties with IDF after investigation reveals mass surveillance program
Updated 09 August 2025

Microsoft investigates ties with IDF after investigation reveals mass surveillance program

Microsoft investigates ties with IDF after investigation reveals mass surveillance program
  • Unit 8200 uses Azure cloud service to store millions of phone calls from Palestinians
  • Israeli employees of tech giant may have concealed details from management

LONDON: Tech giant Microsoft is investigating how an elite Israeli military intelligence unit is using its Azure cloud service after an investigation revealed extensive ties between the two entities.

There are mounting concerns that Israeli staffers working at Microsoft’s facility in the country may have concealed major details from upper management about the nature of the sensitive military collaboration, The Guardian reported on Saturday.

Unit 8200, Israel’s military surveillance agency, is broadly comparable to the National Security Agency in the US.

Through its former head, who resigned in the wake of the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, the unit carried out extensive efforts to migrate data to Microsoft’s Azure cloud storage service.

It was part of a broader plan to execute mass surveillance of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories, as revealed by a joint investigation by The Guardian, +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call.

Unit 8200 chiefs aimed to intercept and record a million phone calls per hour from across the Occupied Territories, using the information to develop an extensive archive and history of Palestinian day-to-day life.

Sources from the unit who spoke to the investigation said some of the data gathered from the intercepted calls was used to identify targets for strikes in Gaza.

Now, senior executives from Microsoft are reportedly assessing the nature of information held by Unit 8200 on their servers.

Sources familiar with the situation told The Guardian that Microsoft’s leadership is deeply concerned that Israel-based staff may have hidden key details about their relationship with Unit 8200, and how the surveillance operation uses data stored on Azure.

In May, Microsoft claimed in a review of its relationship with the Israel Defense Forces that there was “no evidence to date” that Azure had been “used to target or harm people” in Gaza.

That claim, however, is understood to have been based on assurances from Microsoft’s Israel-based staff.

But senior executives at its US headquarters are beginning to doubt the accuracy of the information provided to them by Israeli staff, The Guardian reported.

They are also questioning whether Israeli employees may have felt more bound by their national loyalties than to Microsoft, causing them to conceal key information on behalf of the military.

The Guardian, using leaked documents from Microsoft, identified several of the tech firm’s Israel-based employees who were involved in managing projects with Unit 8200. All had previously posted online that they had served in, or were reservists for, the elite unit.

Microsoft has yet to launch another formal review into its ties to the Israeli military. A spokesperson said the company “takes these allegations seriously, as shown by our previous independent investigation.

“As we receive new information, we’re committed to making sure we have a chance to validate any new data and take any needed action.”


Arab ministerial committee holds Israel fully responsible for ongoing genocide in Gaza

Arab ministerial committee holds Israel fully responsible for ongoing genocide in Gaza
Updated 09 August 2025

Arab ministerial committee holds Israel fully responsible for ongoing genocide in Gaza

Arab ministerial committee holds Israel fully responsible for ongoing genocide in Gaza
  • The committee also demanded unconditional access to Gaza and stressed on the need to immediately start implementing the Arab reconstruction plan

CAIRO: The Arab ministerial committee on Gaza said on Saturday that it holds Israel fully responsible for the genocidal crimes against Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip.

“We hold the Israeli occupation fully responsible for the ongoing genocide and the unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe taking place in the Gaza Strip,” read a statement issued by ministers of the Joint Extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit on developments in Gaza.

The committee called upon the international community – particularly the permanent members of the Security Council – to take urgent action to stop Israel’s illegal aggressive policies.

The committee also urged for the “immediate and comprehensive cessation of the Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip, and an end to the ongoing violations committed by the occupying forces against civilians and civilian infrastructure in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem.”

The committee also demanded unconditional access to Gaza.

“The demand that Israel, as the occupying power, immediately and unconditionally allow the entry of humanitarian assistance at scale into the Gaza Strip — including food, medicine, and fuel — and ensure the freedom of operation of relief agencies and international humanitarian organizations, in accordance with international humanitarian law and its applicable principles,”

It also emphasized “the need to work on the immediate start of the implementation of the Arab-Islamic plan for the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, and calls for active participation in the Gaza Reconstruction Conference to be held in Cairo soon.”

After a security cabinet meeting on Friday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed a plan to take over Gaza City had been approved.

Israel’s military offensive since October 7 attack has killed over 61,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.


Syria will not take part in meetings with Kurdish-led SDF in Paris, state TV says

Syria will not take part in meetings with Kurdish-led SDF in Paris, state TV says
Updated 09 August 2025

Syria will not take part in meetings with Kurdish-led SDF in Paris, state TV says

Syria will not take part in meetings with Kurdish-led SDF in Paris, state TV says
  • The source cited an earlier forum arranged by the US-backed SDF that it said was a violation of an accord between the government and the group

Syria will not take part in planned meetings with Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in Paris, Syria’s state news agency quoted a government source as saying on Saturday, casting doubt over an integration deal signed by the two sides in March.
The SDF was the main fighting force allied to the United States in Syria during fighting that defeated Daesh in 2019 after the group declared a caliphate across swathes of Syria and Iraq.
In March, the SDF signed a deal with the new Islamist-led government in Damascus to join Syria’s state institutions.
The deal aims to stitch back together a country fractured by 14 years of war, paving the way for Kurdish-led forces that hold a quarter of Syria to merge with Damascus, along with regional Kurdish governing bodies.
It did not specify how the SDF will be merged with Syria’s armed forces, however. The SDF has previously said its forces must join as a bloc, while Damascus wants them to join as individuals.
The source was quoted by the news agency SANA as saying that Damascus would not be involved in negotiations with any side that aims to “revive the era of the former regime.”
The source was responding to a forum hosted by the Kurdish-led group which governs northeast Syria on Friday in which it called for the review of the constitutional declaration issued earlier this year by Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa.
The source told SANA the forum resembled an attempt to present proposals that were contrary to the March agreement and that the Syrian government would not attend planned meetings in Paris with the group. The report gave no further details of the meetings, which had not been previously announced.
It accused the Kurdish-led group of hosting “separatist figures engaged in hostile acts,” holding the SDF fully responsibility for its implications, including the reimposition of sanctions and the “summoning of foreign intervention.”
The ongoing dispute is the latest in a recent conflict between the Syrian administration and the SDF after clashes between the group and government forces earlier this month. 


Sudan volunteers help families give Khartoum war dead proper burials

Sudan volunteers help families give Khartoum war dead proper burials
Updated 10 min 21 sec ago

Sudan volunteers help families give Khartoum war dead proper burials

Sudan volunteers help families give Khartoum war dead proper burials
  • Teams of workers in dust-streaked white hazmat suits comb vacant lots, looking for the spots where survivors say they buried their loved ones
  • Each body is disinfected, wrapped and labelled by Red Crescent volunteers before being transported to Al-Andalus cemetery

KHARTOUM: In Sudan’s war-scarred capital Khartoum, Red Crescent volunteers have begun the grisly task of exhuming the dead from makeshift plots where they were buried during the fighting so their families can give them a proper funeral.

Teams of workers in dust-streaked white hazmat suits comb vacant lots, looking for the spots where survivors say they buried their loved ones.

Mechanical diggers peel back layers of earth under the watchful eye of Hisham Zein Al-Abdeen, head of the city’s forensic medicine department.

“We’re finding graves everywhere – in front of homes, inside schools and mosques,” he said, surveying the scene.

“Every day we discover new ones.”

Here, in the southern neighborhood of Al-Azhari, families buried their loved ones wherever they could, as fighting raged between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

When war broke out in April 2023, the RSF quickly swept through Khartoum, occupying entire districts as residents fled air and artillery bombardments and street fighting.

In March, the army and its allies recaptured the capital in a fierce offensive.

It is only now, after the front lines of the conflict moved elsewhere, that bereaved families can give their loved ones a proper burial.

“My daughter was only 12,” said Jawaher Adam, standing by a shallow makeshift grave, tears streaming down her face.

“I had only sent her out to buy shoes when she died. We couldn’t take her to the cemetery. We buried her in the neighborhood,” she said.

Months on, Adam has come to witness her daughter’s reburial – this time, she says, with dignity.

Each body is disinfected, wrapped and labelled by Red Crescent volunteers before being transported to Al-Andalus cemetery, 10 kilometers (six miles) away.

“It’s painful,” said Adam, “but to honor the dead is to give them a proper burial.”

Many of the war’s deadliest battlegrounds have been densely populated residential districts, often without access to hospitals to care for the wounded or count the dead.

That has made it nearly impossible to establish a firm death toll for the war.

Former US envoy Tom Perriello has said that some estimates suggest up to 150,000 people were killed in the conflict’s first year alone.

In the capital, more than 61,000 people died during the first 14 months of war – a 50 percent increase on the pre-war death rate – according to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Of those deaths, 26,000 were attributed to violence.

At first glance, the vacant lot in Al-Azhari where Red Crescent volunteers are digging seems to be full of litter – pieces of wood, bricks, an old signpost.

Look more closely, however, and it becomes clear they have been placed in straight lines, each one marking a makeshift grave.

Volunteers exhumed 317 graves in that one lot, Zein Al-Abdeen said.

Similar mass graves have been uncovered across the capital, he said, with 2,000 bodies reburied so far.

But his team estimates there could be 10,000 bodies buried in makeshift graves across the city.

At the exhumation site, grieving mothers watch on silently, their hands clasped tightly to their chest.

They, like Adam, are among the lucky few who know where their loved ones are buried. Many do not.

At least 8,000 people were reported missing in Sudan last year, in what the International Committee of the Red Cross says is only “the tip of the iceberg.”

For now, authorities label unclaimed bodies, and keep their details on file.

With the bodies now exhumed, the community can have some degree of closure, and the vacant lot can be repurposed.

“Originally, this site was designated as a school,” said Youssef Mohamed Al-Amin, executive director of Jebel Awliya district.

“We’re moving the bodies so it can serve its original purpose.”

The United Nations estimates that up to two million people may return to Khartoum state by the end of the year – but much depends on whether security and basic services can be restored.

Before the war, greater Khartoum was home to nine million people, according to the UN Development Programme, but the conflict has displaced at least 3.5 million.

For now, much of the capital remains without power or running water, as hospitals and schools lie in ruins.