‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike

Men clear debris off the roof of a building by the site of a previous Israeli air strike on the village of Aito in northern Lebanon on October 15, 2024. (AFP)
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Men clear debris off the roof of a building by the site of a previous Israeli air strike on the village of Aito in northern Lebanon on October 15, 2024. (AFP)
‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike
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People search the rubble of a destroyed building at the site of a previous Israeli air strike on the village of Aito in northern Lebanon on October 15, 2024. (AFP)
‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike
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A Lebanese army soldier checks a destroyed car at the site of Monday's Israeli airstrike in Aito village, north Lebanon, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP)
‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike
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A man walks through rubble past an excavator showing a poster of the Virgin Mary clearing debris at the site of a previous Israeli air strike on the village of Aito in northern Lebanon on October 15, 2024. (AFP)
‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike
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A torn plush bear doll is strewn past debris and rubble at the site of a previous Israeli air strike on the village of Aito in northern Lebanon on October 15, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 16 October 2024

‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike

‘Nowhere is safe’: Lebanon Christian village reels from Israel strike
  • The bombing sent many people fleeing to Lebanon’s mountains, including Christian villages which are coming to fear the cost of hosting displaced communities

AITO: Elie Alwan sheltered a displaced Shiite family from southern Lebanon in his peaceful Christian-majority village, believing they would be safe — instead an Israeli air strike killed them, destroyed his home and injured his mother.
The October 14 strike on the north Lebanon village of Aito in the Zgharta district killed 23 people, including at least 12 women and two children, many of them displaced from south Lebanon, according to the official National News Agency.
“It’s a massacre that happened in my home,” said 42-year-old Alwan.
The attack, which wiped out an entire family, was the first time the mountain village has been struck by Israel, which has mostly targeted Shiite-dominated Hezbollah strongholds.
The four-story building where Alwan lived was destroyed and the displaced family whom he had known for 15 years were wiped out.
“They were a decent family,” said the father of four, blood stains still visible on the rubble-strewn ground beside him.
“I welcomed them as friends.”
Michel Moawad, an MP opposed to Hezbollah and a native of the region, said the strike targeted a member of the pro-Iranian militant group.
A security official, speaking anonymously to AFP, said the strike occurred just after a man arrived by car at the building to visit the displaced family.
“I blame the man who came here. Why did you put us in this mess?” said Alwan, who is now forced to rent a house in the coastal town of Chekka, several kilometers (miles) away.
He was not there during the strike, but his mother was wounded in the leg and was being treated in hospital.

As excavators worked to clear the mountain road a day after the strike, the stench of corpses hung in the air and human remains lay in a ditch at the side of the road.
A statue of Saint Charbel Makhlouf, a Christian Maronite was intact but surrounded by destruction.
The strike sparked alarm across Lebanon’s north and prompted a call for an independent and thorough investigation from the UN rights office.
“We have real concerns with respect to... the laws of war and the principles of distinction, proportion and proportionality,” spokesman Jeremy Laurence told reporters on Monday.
A year of cross-border clashes between Israel and Hezbollah escalated on September 23 when Israel dramatically increased its bombing of Hezbollah strongholds in the country’s east, south and Beirut’s southern suburbs.
The bombing sent many people fleeing to Lebanon’s mountains, including Christian villages which are coming to fear the cost of hosting displaced communities.
“We are Christians, our religion teaches us tolerance. But now we have learned our lesson. We will no longer welcome anyone into the family” home, said Alwan’s brother Sarkis, who lives just next door.
Sarkis did not name Hezbollah but suggested he was angry with the powerful Iran-backed group for dragging Lebanon into a war with Israel.
“We are no match for the United States,” Israel’s main ally, said Sarkis.
Nearby, Adele Khoury was unequivocal in her condemnation of the militant group.
“Hezbollah has brought us into a war from which we can no longer escape,” she said.
Standing beside the church square, the elderly woman said she feared Israel’s string of assassinations of Hezbollah officials would leave no community unharmed.
“We are afraid every day that Israel will come and target us, because wherever there is a (Hezbollah) commander, they target him,” she said.
But when talking about the displaced, she was more sympathetic.
“The poor things, they fled to safe areas, but now nowhere is safe.”


Syria busts Hezbollah-linked cell: ministry

Syria busts Hezbollah-linked cell: ministry
Updated 51 min 26 sec ago

Syria busts Hezbollah-linked cell: ministry

Syria busts Hezbollah-linked cell: ministry
  • Syria said Thursday that its forces dismantled a cell affiliated with Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah group, a key ally of ousted president Bashar Assad

DAMASCUS: Syria said Thursday that its forces dismantled a cell affiliated with Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah group, a key ally of ousted president Bashar Assad.
“Specialized units in cooperation with the general intelligence service... were able to arrest a terrorist cell belonging to the Hezbollah militia that was active” in the Damascus countryside, an interior ministry statement said, quoting a local commander.
“Preliminary investigations showed that the cell members underwent training in military camps in Lebanese territory, and were planning to carry out operations inside Syrian territory that threaten national security and stability,” the statement said.
Forces seized ammunition and weapons including Grad-type rockets, launchers and anti-tank missiles, it said, adding the case was referred to the judiciary.
Hezbollah fighters helped Assad claw back territory during Syria’s civil war, which erupted in 2011 after the repression of anti-government protests.
The Iran-backed group openly backed Assad from 2013 until his ouster last December by an Islamist-led alliance.
Hezbollah, heavily weakened in a recent war with Israel, lost a key supply route from backer Iran through Syria after the new authorities took power.
In March, Lebanon and Syria signed an agreement to address border security threats after clashes left 10 dead.
This week, the office of Lebanese Justice Minister Adel Nassar said two specialized committees had held their first meeting in Damascus to discuss security and judicial matters.


Turkiye started training and support for Syria’s army, source says

Turkiye started training and support for Syria’s army, source says
Updated 11 September 2025

Turkiye started training and support for Syria’s army, source says

Turkiye started training and support for Syria’s army, source says
  • Under the military cooperation accord signed in August, Turkiye has said it will provide Syria’s armed forces with military training, weapons and logistical tools

ANKARA, Sept 11 : Turkiye has started training and providing consultancy and technical support for Syria’s army under an agreement signed last month, a Turkish defense ministry source said on Thursday.
Under the military cooperation accord signed between the two countries’ defense ministries in August, Turkiye has said it will provide Syria’s armed forces with military training, weapons and logistical tools.
The source, speaking at a briefing in Ankara, also said that reports of Israel carrying out attacks against Turkish equipment stationed in Syria were false and that there were no changes to Turkiye’s personnel or equipment in northern Syria.


Doha to host emergency Arab-Islamic summit to discuss Israeli attack on Qatar

Doha to host emergency Arab-Islamic summit to discuss Israeli attack on Qatar
Updated 51 min 49 sec ago

Doha to host emergency Arab-Islamic summit to discuss Israeli attack on Qatar

Doha to host emergency Arab-Islamic summit to discuss Israeli attack on Qatar

The Qatari capital will host an emergency Arab-Islamic summit next Sunday and Monday to discuss the Israeli attack on Doha that targeted Hamas leaders, according to an invitation by Qatar's new agency.

Meanwhile, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty arrived in Doha on Tuesday to express Egypt’s full solidarity with Qatar following Israeli attacks that targeted senior Hamas leaders.

Abdelatty was received by Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani.


WHO says to remain in Gaza City despite Israel’s call to leave

WHO says to remain in Gaza City despite Israel’s call to leave
Updated 11 September 2025

WHO says to remain in Gaza City despite Israel’s call to leave

WHO says to remain in Gaza City despite Israel’s call to leave
  • “To civilians in Gaza: WHO and partners remain in Gaza City,” the World Health Organization said on its X account

GENEVA: The UN’s health agency said Wednesday its workers will remain in Gaza City despite calls from Israel’s military for people to flee an assault it is mounting there.
“To civilians in Gaza: WHO and partners remain in Gaza City,” the World Health Organization said on its X account.
Israel’s army is intensifying its attacks on Gaza City — the main urban center in the besieged Gaza Strip — with the goal of seizing the city. This week, it warned civilians there to leave.
The UN estimates that around one million Palestinians live in and around Gaza City.
“WHO is appalled by the latest evacuation order,” the head of the UN agency, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said on X.
He said the Israeli demand that the city’s one million people go to what Israel was calling a “humanitarian zone” in the south of the Gaza Strip was unfeasible.
“The zone has neither the size nor scale of services to support those already there, let alone new arrivals,” he said.
Tedros pointed out that half of the functioning hospitals left in the Gaza Strip were in Gaza City, and the territory’s “crippled health system cannot afford to lose any of these remaining facilities.”
He urged the international community to “act,” saying that, in Gaza, “this catastrophe is human-made, and the responsibility rests with us all.”
Israel has been waging offensive operations in Gaza since October 2023, following a deadly attack launched from there by Hamas that resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed more than 64,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.
The UN has declared famine in parts of Gaza, which Israel contests.


Qatar rejects Netanyahu’s ‘shameful’ attempt to justify Israel’s ‘cowardly attack’

Qatar rejects Netanyahu’s ‘shameful’ attempt to justify Israel’s ‘cowardly attack’
Updated 11 September 2025

Qatar rejects Netanyahu’s ‘shameful’ attempt to justify Israel’s ‘cowardly attack’

Qatar rejects Netanyahu’s ‘shameful’ attempt to justify Israel’s ‘cowardly attack’
  • Says Netanyahu fully aware that Qatar’s hosting of Hamas office falls within Doha’s mediation efforts requested by the US and Israel

RIYADH: Qatar denounced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s remarks about Doha’s hosting of a Hamas office as “reckless” and a “shameful attempt” to justify Israel’s “cowardly attack” on Qatari territory.

“Netanyahu is fully aware that the hosting of the Hamas office took place within the framework of Qatar’s mediation efforts requested by the United States and Israel,” Qatar said in a strongly worded statement issued by its Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He made the remark as Israel came under international condemnation after launching an air strike Tuesday on a building in Qatar in a bid to assassinate Hamas political leaders. 

The airstrike took place shortly after Hamas claimed responsibility for a shooting on Monday that killed six people at a bus stop on the outskirts of Jerusalem.  

 

 

On Wednesday, Netanyahu urged Qatar to expel Hamas officials or hold them to account, “because if you don’t, we will”.

His comments came a day after deadly strikes targeted Hamas leaders in Qatar — a US ally — a first in the oil-rich Gulf that rattled a region long shielded from conflict.

Qatar, which said one of its security forces was killed in the attack, said Israel was treacherous and engaged in “state terrorism.”

Also on Wednesday, Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said the attack killed hope for Gaza hostages, calling for Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu to be “brought to justice.”

World must act

The Qatari statement called on the international community to “shoulder its responsibility by rejecting Netanyahu’s Islamophobic and inciteful rhetoric” and to put “an end to political distortions that undermine mediation efforts and obstruct the pursuit of peace.”

In rejecting Netanyahu’s rhetoric, Qatar pointed out that the Israeli leader was fully aware of the Gulf nation’s role in facilitating numerous exchanges and ceasefires, which have “brought relief to Palestinian civilians and Israeli hostages in desperate need of basic humanitarian relief from the ruthlessness that has ensued since October 7th.”

It said the negotiations were always held in an official and transparent manner, with international support and in the presence of US and Israeli delegations. 

“Netanyahu’s insinuation that Qatar secretly harbored the Hamas delegation is a desperate attempt to justify a crime condemned by the entire world,” the statement said.

“The false comparison to the pursuit of al-Qaeda after the terrorist attacks is a new, miserable justification for its treacherous practices. There was no international mediation involving an al-Qaeda negotiating delegation, with which the United States could engage with international support, to bring peace to the region at the time,” it added.