Lebanon’s death warrant signed on Oct. 7, and we have been updating the obituary ever since

Special Lebanon’s death warrant signed on Oct. 7, and we have been updating the obituary ever since
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Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon, on Oct. 3, 2024. (AP)
Special Lebanon’s death warrant signed on Oct. 7, and we have been updating the obituary ever since
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Smoke rises from buildings hit in an overnight Israeli airstrike that targeted Beirut's southern suburbs on October 3, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 07 October 2024

Lebanon’s death warrant signed on Oct. 7, and we have been updating the obituary ever since

Lebanon’s death warrant signed on Oct. 7, and we have been updating the obituary ever since
  • Lebanon being drawn into someone else’s catastrophe
  • Hezbollah’s ‘hubris’ and unilateral actions are to blame

LONDON: How does one write a feature looking through Lebanon’s year without it sounding like an obituary?

Across Lebanon and wherever in the world citizens found themselves on Oct. 7 last year, phones buzzed and lit up with notifications of the seemingly unbelievable news.

Hamas, the insurgent militant group that had been running the Palestinian enclave of Gaza since 2007, had launched a surprise attack on Israel.

At first, near disbelief. Could it possibly be true?

Israel had long boasted about the impregnable nature of its “Iron Wall,” the high-tech, 7-meter-tall fence surrounding Gaza.

Bristling with cameras, watch towers, robotic machine guns, razor wire, radar and underground sensors, it was designed precisely to prevent exactly such an incursion.

Yet with every fresh ping, with every update flashing on smartphones, the unthinkable became increasingly possible, then probable and, finally, certain.

Hamas, relying on a combination of brute force and ingenuity — bulldozers smashed through the fence and drones dropped explosives on watch towers, knocking out the remotely operated machine guns — had broken through the Iron Wall in as many as 30 places.

More than 1,200 Israelis and others were killed, and 251 taken back to Gaza as hostages.

Hearts sank. All Lebanese knew full well that Lebanon was never not going to get involved, whether its citizens wanted to or not.

Past is prologue, and Lebanon’s history is riddled with sudden yanks into conflicts in which it has no business being involved.

From Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon, in response to Palestinian militants using the country’s south as a launching pad for missiles and attacks, to the 2006 war between Iran-backed group Hezbollah and Israel, Lebanese citizens have always found themselves caught in the crossfire.

Their dead, wounded, ruined homes and countless devastated lives are written off by all sides as collateral damage.

Now, one year on since the start of Hamas’ assault on Israel and the latter’s devastating response in Gaza — which has claimed in excess of 40,000 Palestinian lives, including more than 6,000 women and 11,000 children — once again Lebanon is being sucked into someone else’s catastrophe.

It all seemed depressingly inevitable from the outset, when the day after the Hamas attack its ally Hezbollah began exchanging fire with Israel over Lebanon’s southern border.

Since then, Lebanon has suffered immense damage, especially in its southern villages and towns, which have been repeatedly and indiscriminately pounded by Israeli jets targeting Hezbollah outposts.

Nearly 1 million Lebanese have been displaced internally, 1,974 have been killed including 127 children, and 9,384 wounded, according to the Lebanese health ministry.

The situation began to deteriorate alarmingly on Sept. 17, when thousands of Hezbollah pagers, sabotaged by Israeli agents, exploded simultaneously across Lebanon, killing a dozen people, including two children, and wounding thousands more.

The following day similarly sabotaged walkie-talkies detonated. This time 30 people died and hundreds more were injured. Now Israeli troops have invaded the south of Lebanon.

Lebanon has been in a spiral since 2019, when it was rocked by a disastrous and ongoing financial crisis that has seen the lira drastically devalued.

Since then further blows have included the COVID-19 pandemic, which struck Lebanon in early 2020, and the devastating Beirut Port explosion later that year that rocked the capital and destroyed thousands of structures.

To make matters worse, political paralysis has left Lebanon without a president or an effective government for the past two years.

In a statement issued on Oct. 31, 2023, the first anniversary of Lebanon’s presidential vacancy, the US State Department accused the country’s “divided parliamentarians” of “putting their personal ambitions ahead of the interests of their country.”

Issued just over three weeks after the Hamas attack on Israel, the statement added presciently: “Even as rising tensions along Lebanon’s southern border threaten the country’s stability and the economic crisis deepens, the Lebanese people are deprived of leadership when they need it most.”

Around the world, since Oct. 7, Lebanese have been glued to their screens, holding their breath with each missile fired across the border in either direction.

And listening with growing anxiety to the pronouncements of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the fiery speeches of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

Nasrallah’s death in an Israeli air strike on Beirut on Sept. 27 killed at least five other people and injured dozens more.

For the Lebanese in Lebanon and abroad, every day begins with a recap of the destruction and a counting of the dead, injured and missing. Every day ends with evacuation drills across areas of the capital targeted by Israeli bombs and missiles.

Today, as before, they are helpless bystanders, witnesses to the destruction of their country and the loss of the lives of their friends and family members.

As Michael Young of the Malcom H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center wrote late last month, “the opening of a front in the south on Oct. 8, 2023, was the final straw. Hezbollah consulted none of its Lebanese partners in initiating a war in defense of its ally Hamas in Gaza.”

Hezbollah, he added, “displayed remarkable hubris in being completely indifferent to the fact that Lebanon paid a heavy price in the past for the Palestinian cause — especially the Shia community itself.

“After hubris comes nemesis, however, and today Hezbollah is largely alone in facing the violent Israeli campaign against Lebanon.”

Perhaps. But for now, the war has seen Lebanon’s sectarian noose grow ever tighter.

Social media has become a parallel battleground, for the preaching of one side against the other, pitting blame based on religiosity and correlating silence with acquiescence.

The Lebanese have always reluctantly accepted that, in Lebanon, this is just the way things are.

It remains to be seen whether, in the wake of the current disaster engulfing the country, the Lebanese will finally abandon their passive acceptance of a cruel fate dictated by others.


Survivors of Israel's pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover

Updated 21 sec ago

Survivors of Israel's pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover

Survivors of Israel's pager attack on Hezbollah last year struggle to recover
BAZOURIEH: Her head heavy with a cold, Sarah Jaffal woke up late and shuffled into the kitchen. The silence of the apartment was pierced by the unfamiliar buzzing of a pager lying near a table.
Annoyed but curious, the 21-year-old picked up the device belonging to a family member. She saw a message: “Error,” then “Press OK.”
Jaffal didn’t have time to respond. She didn't even hear the explosion.
“Suddenly everything went dark,” she said. “I felt I was in a whirlpool.” She was in and out of consciousness for hours, blood streaming from her mouth, excruciating pain in her fingertips.
At that moment on Sept. 17, 2024, thousands of pagers distributed to the Hezbollah group were blowing up in homes, offices, shops and on frontlines across Lebanon, remotely detonated by Israel. Hezbollah had been firing rockets into Israel almost daily for nearly a year in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.
After years of planning, Israel had infiltrated the supply chain of Hezbollah, the most powerful of Iran’s armed proxies in the Middle East. It used shell companies to sell the rigged devices to commercial associates of Hezbollah in an operation aimed at disrupting the Iran-backed group’s communication networks and harming and disorienting its members.
The pager attack was stunning in its scope. It wounded more than 3,000 people and killed 12, including two children.
Israel boasts of it as a show of its technological and intelligence prowess. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently presented U.S. President Donald Trump with a golden pager as a gift.
Human rights and United Nations reports, however, say the attack may have violated international law, calling it indiscriminate.
Hezbollah, also a major Shiite political party with a wide network of social institutions, has acknowledged that most of those wounded and killed were its fighters or personnel. The simultaneous explosions in populated areas, however, also wounded many civilians like Jaffal, who was one of four women along with 71 men who received medical treatment in Iran. Hezbollah won't say how many civilians were hurt, but says most were relatives of the group's personnel or workers in Hezbollah-linked institutions, including hospitals.
Ten months later, survivors are on a slow, painful path to recovery. They are easily identifiable, with missing eyes, faces laced with scars, hands with missing fingers — signs of the moment when they checked the buzzing devices. The scars also mark them as a likely Hezbollah member or a dependent.
Rare interviews
For weeks after the attack, The Associated Press attempted to reach survivors, who stayed out of the public eye. Many spent weeks outside Lebanon for medical treatment. Most in the group’s tight-knit community remained quiet while Hezbollah investigated the massive security breach.
The AP also contacted Hezbollah and its association treating those affected by the attacks to see if they could facilitate contacts. The group, at war with Israel for decades, is also one of the most powerful political factions in Lebanon, with members holding nearly 10% of parliament seats and two ministerial posts. It has its own security apparatus and offers extensive health, religious and other social and commercial services in southern and eastern Lebanon and parts of Beirut.
A representative of Hezbollah’s Association of Wounded did share with AP the contacts of eight people who had expressed readiness to share their stories. The AP independently contacted them, and six agreed to be interviewed. They included Jaffal and another woman, two 12-year-old children and two men, one a preacher, the other a fighter.
All are family members of Hezbollah officials or fighters. All lost fingers. Shrapnel lodged under their skin. The men were blinded. The women and children each lost one eye, with the other damaged.
There were no minders present, and no questions were off-limits. Some declined to answer questions about the identity or role of the pager’s owner, identifying them only as relatives.
The hours of interviews offered a rare glimpse into the attack's human toll. Survivors described how the incessantly buzzing pagers exploded when picked up, whether they pressed a button or not. Some said their ears still ring from the blast.
”I’ve put up with so much pain I never imagined I could tolerate,” said Jaffal, a university graduate.
The survivors expressed ongoing support for Hezbollah but acknowledged the security breach. They blamed Israel for their wounds.
Rights groups have argued the attack was indiscriminate because the pagers detonated in populated areas, and it was nearly impossible to know who was holding the devices or where they were when they exploded. The preacher, Mustafa Choeib, recalled that his two young daughters used to play with his pager and he sometimes found it among their toys.
Israel’s Mossad spy agency declined to comment on AP questions about those allegations. But Israeli security officials have rejected that the attack was indiscriminate, saying the pagers were exclusively sold to Hezbollah members and that tests were conducted to ensure that only the person holding the pager would be harmed.
A turning point for Hezbollah
The pagers were the opening strike in an Israeli campaign that would cripple Hezbollah.
The day after the pager bombings, Hezbollah walkie-talkies exploded in another Israeli attack that killed at least 25 people and injured over 600, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Israel then launched a campaign of airstrikes that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah and hundreds of other militants and civilians. The war ended with a ceasefire in November.
Nine months later, Israel stunned and weakened Iran with a campaign of airstrikes that targeted Iranian nuclear sites, senior military officials and symbols of the Islamic Republic’s grip.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, has been left reeling. Besides the military blow, the group is left with the financial and psychological burden of thousands who need long-term medical treatment and recovery.
Pagers are widely seen as outdated, but they were a main part of Hezbollah’s communication network. Nasrallah had repeatedly warned against cellphones. Israel could easily track them, he said.
With old pagers breaking down, the group ordered new ones. Israel sold the rigged devices through shell companies.
According to a Hezbollah official, the group had ordered 15,000 pagers. Only 8,000 arrived, and nearly half were distributed to members. Others destined for Lebanon were intercepted in Turkey days after the attack when Hezbollah tipped off officials there.
Hezbollah's investigation into how its communications networks were infiltrated found that the purchase of the rigged pagers resulted from negligence, and its officials were cleared of suspicions of collaborating with Israel, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the probe.
Some Hezbollah members had complained the new pagers were too bulky. Some didn’t use them because batteries died quickly or heated up.
Hospitals were like a ‘slaughterhouse’
The simultaneous explosions spread chaos and panic in Lebanon. Hospitals were overwhelmed.
It was like a “slaughterhouse,” Zeinab Mestrah said.
Until she reached a hospital, Mestrah thought an explosion in an electricity cable had blinded her, not the pager of a relative, a Hezbollah member.
“People didn’t recognize each other. Families were shouting out their relatives’ names to identify them,” she recalled from her home in Beirut.
Doctors mainly stopped her bleeding. Five days later, the 26-year-old interior decorator and event planner traveled to Iran for treatment. Her right eye was saved, with shrapnel removed.
The first thing she saw after 10 days of darkness was her mother. She also lost the tips of three fingers on her right hand. Her ears still ring today.
Mestrah said her recovery has delayed plans to find a new career. She realizes she cannot resume her old one.
The next thing she looks forward to is her wedding, to her fiance of eight years.
“He is half my recovery,” she said.
The representative of Hezbollah’s Association of Wounded said none of those injured has fully recovered. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to address the media.
A Hezbollah fighter struck
Mahdi Sheri, a 23-year-old Hezbollah fighter, had been ordered back to the frontline on the day of the attack. Before leaving, he charged his pager and spent time with family. For his security, no mobile phones were allowed in the house while he was there.
There were many drones in the sky that day.
His pager usually vibrated. This time, it beeped. He approached to check for Hezbollah warnings or directives. He saw the message: “Error,” then “Press OK.” He followed the prompt.
He felt a sharp pain in his head and eyes. His bed was covered in blood. Thinking he had been hit by a drone, he stumbled outside and passed out.
He was first treated in Syria, then in Iraq as hospitals in Lebanon struggled to handle the high number of patients. Shrapnel was removed from his left eye socket and he had a prosthetic eye installed.
For a while, he could see shadows with his remaining eye. With time, that dimmed. He can no longer play football. Hezbollah is helping him find a new job. Sheri realizes it's impossible now to find a role alongside Hezbollah fighters.
He asked his fiancée if she wanted to move on. She refused. They married during a video call while he was in Iraq, a month after his injury.
“Nothing stood in our way,” Sheri said. He moves between southern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs, where his wife lives and studies to be a nurse.
The community is shaken. Some children fear coming near their fathers, he said.
“It not only affects us but also those around us.”
A boy with a face full of scars
In southern Lebanon, 12-year-old Hussein Dheini picked up the pager that belonged to his father, a Hezbollah member. The explosion cost the boy his right eye and damaged his left. It blew off the tips of two fingers on his right hand. On his left hand, the pinky and middle finger remain.
His teeth were blown out. His grandmother picked them off the couch, along with the tip of his nose.
“It was a nightmare,” said his mother, Faten Haidar.
The boy, a member of Hezbollah scouts, the group’s youth movement, had been talented at reciting the Quran. Now he struggles to pace his breathing. He can read with one eye but is quickly exhausted. The family has moved to a ground-floor apartment so he climbs fewer stairs.
He wears glasses now. Pink scars crisscross his face and his reconstructed nose. He spends more time with other children injured like him, and only goes to school for exams. Dheini can’t go swimming with his father, since sea or river water could harm his wounds.
“Before, I used to spend a lot of time on my phone. I used to run and go to school,” the boy said. “Now I go to Beirut” for treatment.
Impatience to rebuild a life
Jaffal has had 45 surgeries in nine months. More will come, including reconstructive surgery on her face and fingers. Two fingers are fused. Four are missing.
She is waiting for a prosthetic right eye. Further surgeries on her left one have been delayed. She can recognize people and places she knows, though she relies more on memory than vision.
The loss of sensation in her fingertips is disorienting. The nerve pain elsewhere is sharp. Weekly physiotherapy reminds her of how much is still ahead.
The driven, inquisitive woman leans on her faith to summon patience.
“God only burdens us with what we can bear,” she said.
She has spoken in religious gatherings at Hezbollah’s invitation about her recovery and resilience. Her biggest fear is becoming dependent.
An information technology graduate, she used to produce videos of family celebrations and events — a career she wanted to explore. Now she watches videos on her phone, though they are blurry.
She giggles to ease the discomfort, and enjoys taking the lead when meeting with fellow victims because she can see better than most.
“I forget my wounds when I see another wounded,” she said.

Experts call for ‘healthocide’ designation after surge in attacks on doctors, hospitals in war

Experts call for ‘healthocide’ designation after surge in attacks on doctors, hospitals in war
Updated 16 min 11 sec ago

Experts call for ‘healthocide’ designation after surge in attacks on doctors, hospitals in war

Experts call for ‘healthocide’ designation after surge in attacks on doctors, hospitals in war
  • Authorities in Gaza have recorded hundreds of deliberate strikes on health staff by Israel
  • ‘Healthcare workers and facilities are no longer afforded the protection guaranteed by international humanitarian law’

LONDON: The targeting of medical facilities in war should be categorized as “healthocide,” academics have said, amid a surge in such attacks in recent years.

Most deliberate attacks on health services have taken place in Gaza since 2023, but other strikes have been recorded in Lebanon, Syria, Sudan and Ukraine, The Guardian reported. Individual medical staff have also been deliberately targeted.

International humanitarian law has explicitly promoted the longstanding principle of medical neutrality, which prohibits attacks on healthcare workers and facilities during war, enabling doctors and surgeons to perform their work on anyone in need.

Dr. Joelle Abi-Rached and his colleagues at the American University of Beirut submitted a commentary to the British Medical Journal warning of the surge in the targeting of health services.

“Both in Gaza and Lebanon, healthcare facilities have not only been directly targeted, but access to care has also been obstructed, including incidents where ambulances have been prevented from reaching the injured, or deliberately attacked,” they wrote.

“What is becoming clear is that healthcare workers and facilities are no longer afforded the protection guaranteed by international humanitarian law.”

The authors highlighted data from Israel’s invasion of Gaza, which has killed at least 986 medical workers.

Healthcare Workers Watch data also shows that 28 doctors from the Palestinian enclave are being detained without charge in Israeli prisons.

Eight of them are senior consultants in surgery, orthopedics, intensive care, cardiology and pediatrics.

Gaza’s health facilities, including major hospitals, have been “turned into battlegrounds” by Israel’s assault, Dr. Rik Peeperkorn, representative of the World Health Organization for the West Bank and Gaza, said in January.

Israel has also engaged in a policy to “systematically dismantle” the health system and “drive it to the brink of collapse,” he added.

Earlier this year, The Guardian conducted an investigative project, Doctors in Detention, to interview healthcare workers in Gaza.

They told the newspaper that their detention, along with hundreds of other medical staff held by the Israeli military, was likely due to their occupation.

In detention, they suffered torture, beatings, starvation and humiliation, The Guardian was told.

Their Israeli guards also played loud music throughout the day and night to prevent them from sleeping, and they were regularly denied food, water and showers.

Israel’s war in Lebanon last year also featured similar tactics to disrupt and destroy local health services.

According to Lebanon’s Public Health Ministry, 217 healthcare workers were killed by the Israel Defense Forces between Oct. 8, 2023, and Jan. 27, 2025.

A further 177 ambulances were damaged, and authorities recorded 68 separate attacks on Lebanese hospitals.

Doctors around the world must “forsake the principle of medical neutrality” and voice their concerns over “healthocide,” the authors of the BMJ commentary urged.

Failing to do so would only embolden future violations of the neutrality principle, they warned, adding that the documentation of attacks and abuses against health workers would help in the enforcement of justice.

The British Medical Association’s medical ethics committee chair, Dr. Andrew Green, said: “In recent years, doctors have been devastated to see the appalling increase in attacks on healthcare, patients and staff in conflict zones, and the disregard for medical neutrality and international humanitarian law.”

He called on international medical associations, NGOs, governments and the UN to “call out when we see human and health rights abused, and hold those breaking international humanitarian law accountable.

“Those with power must use all levers at their disposal to ensure the provision of humanitarian aid and urgent healthcare to the world’s most vulnerable.

“One clear step would be the establishment of a UN special rapporteur on the protection of health in armed conflict.”


Jordan appoints 9 new ministers in government reshuffle

Jordan appoints 9 new ministers in government reshuffle
Updated 6 min 29 sec ago

Jordan appoints 9 new ministers in government reshuffle

Jordan appoints 9 new ministers in government reshuffle
  • The new ministers were sworn in before King Abdullah II at Al Husseiniya Palace

DUBAI: A Royal Decree issued on Wednesday approved a reshuffle in Prime Minister Jaafar Hassan’s government, appointing nine new ministers and accepting the resignation of ten others.

List of newly appointed ministers:

  • Nidal Al-Qatamin was appointed Minister of Transport.
  • Eng. Badria Al-Bilbeisi was appointed Minister of State for Public Sector Development.
  • Abdul Latif Al-Najdawi was appointed Minister of State for Prime Ministry Affairs.
  • Dr. Raed Al-Adwan was appointed Minister of Youth.
  • Dr. Ibrahim Al-Budour was appointed Minister of Health.
  • Dr. Saeb Al-Khraisat was appointed Minister of Agriculture.
  • Dr. Imad Al-Hijazin was appointed Minister of Tourism and Antiquities.
  • Dr. Tariq Abu-Ghazaleh was appointed Minister of Investment.
  • Dr. Ayman Suleiman was appointed Minister of Environment.

The new ministers were sworn in before King Abdullah II at Al Husseiniya Palace, in the presence of Crown Prince Al Hussein, the prime minister, and the Royal Hashemite Court chief.

The decree also accepted the resignations of ministers including:

  • Lina Annab, who served as Minister of Tourism.
  • Khaled Al-Hanifat, who served as Minister of Agriculture.
  • Ahmed Al-Owaidi, who served as Minister of State.
  • Muthanna Gharaibeh, who served as Minister of Investment.
  • Firas Al-Hawari, who served as Minister of Health.
  • Muawiya Al-Radaideh, who served as Minister of Environment.
  • Wissam Al-Tahtamouni, who served as Minister of Transport.
  • Abdullah Al-Adwan, who served as Minister of State for Prime Ministry Affairs.
  • Khair Abu Saileik, who served as Minister of State for Public Sector Development.
  • Yazan Al-Shdaifat, who served as Minister of Youth.

UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students

UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students
Updated 38 min 42 sec ago

UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students

UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students
  • At least 80 are due to begin studies at British universities next month
  • Enclave’s only biometrics center handling UK applications closed in October 2023

LONDON: At least 70 British MPs have signed a letter demanding that the government delay biometric requirements for 80 Palestinian students in Gaza, Sky News reported on Wednesday.

The war in the enclave has prevented the students from fulfilling the mandatory biometric checks, and a government waiver would let them take their university spots in Britain.

The students have all been granted university positions for the beginning of their studies in September. Labour’s Abtisam Mohamed and Barry Gardiner are leading the appeal by MPs.

Applicants for UK visas, which the students need, require a portrait photo and fingerprint scans.

Home Office guidance says this “plays a significant role in delivering security and facilitation in the border and immigration system.”

Biometric data allows border officials to perform identity checks and verify that visa applicants are not on a watchlist, ensuring their eligibility to come to the UK.

However, Gaza’s only biometrics center handling UK applications closed in October 2023 after the start of the war.

The MPs’ letter said: “Even before the war, leaving Gaza to pursue higher education was a complex process. The ongoing siege and restrictions made travel extremely difficult, but in the current state of constant bombardment, shootings at aid sites, and an IPC-declared famine, this process has become all but impossible.”

It added: “Unless the government makes rapid progress with offering visas and coordinating evacuations over the next week, students who should be starting university next month in the UK will be among those who are being shot dead at aid sites, bombed in displacement camps or starving as famine spreads deeper in Gaza.”

Signatories are asking Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to “defer biometric data screening for student visa applicants based in Gaza and open a safe passage to enable these young people to fulfil their academic dreams.”

Other countries in Europe have already “taken proactive steps to ensure safe evacuation routes for students bound for their countries,” the letter said.

Gardiner, speaking to Sky News, highlighted the government’s ability to evacuate injured children from Gaza to receive treatment in the UK.

He questioned why the same mercy is not being shown to the 80 students, who have already been admitted to British institutions.

He also cited previous government exemptions to the biometric rules, such as for Ukrainian refugees and a small number of Afghan families with relatives already in Britain.

A government waiving of the requirement would also “give the state of Palestine the possibility of a future,” Gardiner said.

“These young people are the future of Palestine. They are the young talent … The state of Palestine will need everything from classical musicians right the way through to town planners,” he added.

“And these youngsters are coming over here with that full range of study potential, with the express intention of going back and building their nation.”

They have shown “extraordinary resilience, extraordinary courage, extraordinary ability, and we should facilitate that,” he said.


Hezbollah says Lebanon cabinet decision to limit arms to state is ‘grave sin’

Hezbollah says Lebanon cabinet decision to limit arms to state is ‘grave sin’
Updated 1 min 29 sec ago

Hezbollah says Lebanon cabinet decision to limit arms to state is ‘grave sin’

Hezbollah says Lebanon cabinet decision to limit arms to state is ‘grave sin’
  • Hezbollah said the move was a result of US “diktats” and that it would “deal with it as if it does not exist“
  • The government committed a grave sin by taking a decision to strip Lebanon of its weapons to resist the Israeli enemy, the group said

BEIRUT: Hezbollah said on Wednesday the Lebanese government was committing a “grave sin” by tasking the army with establishing a state monopoly on arms, sharpening a national divide over calls for the Shiite Muslim group to disarm.

The cabinet on Tuesday authorized the Lebanese army to draw up a plan to confine arms across the country to six official security forces by year’s end — a major challenge to the Iran-backed Hezbollah.

The move came after the US and anti-Hezbollah parties in Lebanon ramped up pressure on the cabinet to publicly commit to disarming the party, amid fears that Israel could intensify strikes on Lebanon if they fail to do so.

In a written statement on Wednesday, Hezbollah said the move was a result of US “diktats” and that it would “deal with it as if it does not exist.”

“The government of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam committed a grave sin by taking a decision to strip Lebanon of its weapons to resist the Israeli enemy... This decision fully serves Israel’s interest,” the group said.

The statement said Shiite ministers walked out of the cabinet session before the decision was reached as “an expression of the resistance’s (Hezbollah’s) rejection of this decision.”

The group said it remained ready to discuss a broader national security strategy and called on its supporters to remain patient.

The session at Lebanon’s presidential palace was the first time the cabinet addressed Hezbollah’s weapons — unimaginable when the group was at the zenith of its power before a devastating war with Israel last year.

The cabinet is scheduled to meet again on Thursday to continue discussions on US proposals to disarm Hezbollah within a specific time frame.