Lebanese army reclaims Palestinian sites in Bekaa that served Syrian regime and Hezbollah

On Saturday, the Lebanese army took control of several strategic sites previously held by Palestinian factions. (Supplied)
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On Saturday, the Lebanese army took control of several strategic sites previously held by Palestinian factions. (Supplied)
On Saturday, the Lebanese army took control of several strategic sites previously held by Palestinian factions. (Supplied)
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On Saturday, the Lebanese army took control of several strategic sites previously held by Palestinian factions. (Supplied)
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Updated 21 December 2024

Lebanese army reclaims Palestinian sites in Bekaa that served Syrian regime and Hezbollah

Lebanese army reclaims Palestinian sites in Bekaa that served Syrian regime and Hezbollah
  • Israeli forces continue violations of ceasefire agreement, carrying out demolition operations in Naqoura

BEIRUT: On Saturday, the Lebanese army took control of several strategic sites previously held by Palestinian factions.

The factions had been affiliated with Syrian president Bashar Assad’s regime, which fell 13 days ago, and subsequently with Hezbollah, and had posed a threat to Lebanon’s eastern sector.

The army took over the Sultan Yaacoub site in western Bekaa from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the General Command and the Halwa camp from Fatah Al-Intifada, and the Hechmech site, located between Qousaya and Deir El Ghazal in central Bekaa, from both factions.

Army command said the forces took over the sites in addition to “seizing quantities of weapons and ammunition and military gear.”

It added that the army “continues to take control of positions previously occupied by Palestinian groups within Lebanon as part of efforts to maintain security and stability and enforce state authority in various areas.”

The camps had remained outside of the Lebanese state’s control for around 40 years, refusing to surrender their weapons under the 1989 Taif Agreement, which stated that all weapons should be surrendered to the Lebanese State, except for firearms in Palestinian camps in Lebanon, which were considered Syrian-protected areas.

Hisham Debsi, director of the independent Palestinian center Tatweer for Strategic Studies and Human Development, told Arab News: “The Syrian regime had launched 13 Palestinian organizations, forming its own system that subsequently served its own policies and those of Hezbollah. With the collapse of Hezbollah, these organizations, which are located in Bekaa, became unprotected, and with the collapse of the Assad regime, the last shield for these organizations — who can be called mercenaries — has fallen.

“They were a disgrace to the Palestinian cause because they would speak in its name when, in fact, they were tools used by the Syrian regime and Hezbollah,” he continued. 
These Palestinian factions aimed to “marginalize Fatah and abolish independent Palestinian decision-making,” said Debsi, adding that the Lebanese army taking control of these sites restored “normalcy.”

Regarding the fate of Palestinian militants affiliated with these factions, he said: “As individuals, if they have families in the Lebanese camps, they can join them. However, most of them are Palestinian refugees from Syria, and they can go wherever they wish in Syria.”

Debsi claimed that most Palestinian refugees who fled from Syria to Lebanon during the 2011 protests had since left for Europe, with only a small number remaining in Lebanon’s camps.

In the recent conflict in Lebanon, Israel did not directly target sites associated with Palestinian factions, which were bombarded in the 2006 war. For years, reports have alleged that these sites housed weaponry, but there has never been concrete evidence to support such claims.

In line with security measures enforcing UN Resolution 1701, the Lebanese army reported on Saturday that its intelligence unit had arrested six individuals and seized weapons during raids on three Palestinian refugee camps in the Bekaa Valley.

In southern Lebanon, invading Israeli forces continued their violations of the ceasefire agreement, carrying out further demolition operations in the town of Naqoura. They also set up a permanent military checkpoint in place of a Lebanese army post near the town’s fishing harbor and razed citrus groves near the UNIFIL headquarters.

An Israeli drone flew at low altitude over the border, an area that residents of the south are prohibited from approaching or traversing.

In the southern suburb of Beirut, the General Directorate of Civil Defense released a statement saying that search and rescue teams had successfully recovered the bodies of four victims from the rubble of the Ayoub building in the Haret Hreik area, which was hit by Israeli airstrikes targeting the residence of Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah on Sept. 27.

The bodies will undergo DNA testing to confirm their identities, along with three other bodies discovered on Friday in the same area, the statement added.


Arab vision for Gaza is ‘clear,’ Egypt FM tells Arab News

Arab vision for Gaza is ‘clear,’ Egypt FM tells Arab News
Updated 6 sec ago

Arab vision for Gaza is ‘clear,’ Egypt FM tells Arab News

Arab vision for Gaza is ‘clear,’ Egypt FM tells Arab News
  • Includes neutral administrative committee to temporarily govern in coordination with Palestinian Authority
  • Badr Abdelatty calls for international conference to implement Arab-Islamic recovery, reconstruction plan

NEW YORK: Egypt’s foreign minister on Thursday laid out a “clear,” comprehensive Arab and Muslim vision to end the conflict in Gaza, calling for an immediate ceasefire followed by coordinated reconstruction and governance efforts.

Speaking on the sidelines of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, Badr Abdelatty emphasized the urgent need to halt Israeli military operations and begin rebuilding.

“The first step … is, of course, ending this unjust war. This is extremely important to stop the Israeli aggression,” he told Arab News.

Following a ceasefire, Abdelatty stressed the need “to move ahead with issues related to security arrangements, as well as the governance of Gaza.”

He added: “We in Egypt, in cooperation with Jordan, are providing training to Palestinians to be part of the security force to be deployed in Gaza, in full coordination with the Palestinian Authority.”

On the potential deployment of international forces, Abdelatty said: “We’re open to the idea ... but it should be mandated by the Security Council and, of course, with one objective: to help and support the Palestinian Authority to realize its own independent state.”

As a transitional step, Arab countries are proposing the establishment of a neutral, non-partisan administrative committee to temporarily govern Gaza in coordination with the PA before handing over full control.

“We have an administrative — not political, not affiliated with factions — specific committee to govern Gaza in full coordination with the Palestinian Authority for a specific period, and then to hand over,” Abdelatty said.

He also called for an international conference to be convened immediately after a ceasefire, aimed at implementing an Arab-Islamic recovery and reconstruction plan for Gaza.

“This is extremely important because it was endorsed by the EU, by Japan, by the international community. So all components, all ingredients are there,” he said.

Abdelatty identified the main obstacle to progress as “the lack of political will from the Israeli side. This is what’s extremely important — to end this aggression, this war, as soon as possible, and then to move forward with the other steps.”

He added: “We’re coordinating with Americans, with Qataris, of course, to continue our endeavors in order to reach a deal which will secure the release of all hostages and Palestinian prisoners, and to lift all impediments hindering the flow of humanitarian aid.”


Palestinian leader pledges to work with Trump, others on UN-backed Gaza plan

Palestinian leader pledges to work with Trump, others on UN-backed Gaza plan
Updated 22 min 12 sec ago

Palestinian leader pledges to work with Trump, others on UN-backed Gaza plan

Palestinian leader pledges to work with Trump, others on UN-backed Gaza plan
  • Abbas rejects Hamas actions, calls for disarmament and governance by Palestinian Authority
  • The US has put forward 21-point peace plan for Middle East and Gaza

UNITED NATIONS: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas pledged at the United Nations on Thursday to work with US President Donald Trump, , France and the United Nations on a peace plan for Gaza overwhelmingly backed by the world body.
The 193-member UN General Assembly overwhelmingly endorsed this month a seven-page declaration that aims to advance a two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians and end the Gaza war between Israel and Hamas militants.
The declaration emerged from an international conference at the UN in July — hosted by and France — on the decades-long conflict. The United States and Israel boycotted the event and have rejected the international efforts.

Trump offers 21-point peace plan
Separately, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said on Wednesday that Trump had presented a 21-point peace plan for the Middle East and Gaza during a meeting with leaders of several Muslim-majority countries on the sidelines of this week’s UN General Assembly.
Abbas addressed the annual gathering of world leaders on Thursday via video after the United States said it would not give him a visa to travel to New York.
“Despite all that our people have suffered, we reject what Hamas carried out on October 7th — acts that targeted Israeli civilians and took them as hostages — because such actions do not represent the Palestinian people nor their just struggle for freedom and independence,” Abbas said.

Abbas rules out Hamas role, but Hamas objects
“We have affirmed — and will continue to affirm — that Gaza is an integral part of the State of Palestine, and that we are ready to assume full responsibility for governance and security there. Hamas will have no role in governance, and it — along with other factions — must hand over its weapons to the Palestinian National Authority,” he said. “We reiterate that we do not want an armed state.”
The points he raised are included in the declaration endorsed by the General Assembly.
“We declare our readiness to work with President Donald Trump, with , France, the United Nations and all partners to implement the peace plan” backed by the General Assembly, Abbas said.

Palestinians and Hamas fighters attend a funeral procession for 40 militants and civilians killed during the war with Israel, at the Shati camp for Palestinian refugees north of Gaza City on February 28, 2025. (AFP file photo).

Hamas objects

Hamas rejected the remarks by Abbas.
“We consider the President of the Authority’s assertion that Hamas will have no role in governance an infringement on the inherent right of our Palestinian people to decide their own destiny and to choose who governs them, and a submission — unacceptable to us — to external dictates and schemes,” Hamas said in a statement.
The group also said that its weapons “cannot be compromised so long as the occupation remains entrenched on our land and oppressing our people,” adding: “We denounce the President of the Authority’s call to surrender them.”
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar described Abbas’ speech as “nice words” to the West and accused the Palestinian leader of failing to fight terrorism.
Abbas “said that he is ready to receive the Gaza Strip, which he so easily lost to Hamas in 2007. How nice of him,” Saar posted on X.
An October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel triggered the war in Gaza. Hamas killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and about 251 were taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. More than 65,000 people, also mostly civilians, have since been killed during the war in Gaza, according to local health authorities. 


Israel-Palestine issues not insurmountable, Saudi FM tells Arab News

Israel-Palestine issues not insurmountable, Saudi FM tells Arab News
Updated 46 min 15 sec ago

Israel-Palestine issues not insurmountable, Saudi FM tells Arab News

Israel-Palestine issues not insurmountable, Saudi FM tells Arab News
  • Prince Faisal: ‘If there’s serious will … we could have a Palestinian state in relatively short order’
  • He warns that Gaza reconstruction must be part of long-term solution, not another short-term fix

NEW YORK: The issues between Israel and Palestine are not insurmountable and could be resolved through a negotiated process if there is serious political will, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told Arab News on Thursday.

“Obviously, there will have to be a negotiated process between Palestine and Israel to finalize all of the outstanding issues. We don’t see these issues as insurmountable,” he said.

“If there’s serious will — and we know from the Palestinian Authority that they’re ready and will come to address these issues in a reasonable and pragmatic way — we could have a Palestinian state in relatively short order, one that’s also very much sustainable and viable, and can live in harmony with its neighbors in Israel.”

He was speaking in New York on the sidelines of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, where the Gaza war has dominated world leaders’ discussions.  

It was preceded by the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, which was co-chaired by and France.

It resulted in the adoption of the New York Declaration, a comprehensive roadmap outlining tangible, timebound steps toward the peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The declaration, endorsed by the UNGA with overwhelming support, sets out a multi-dimensional framework addressing political governance, security, humanitarian aid, economic recovery and legal accountability.

It also calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, its reunification with the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority and the exclusion of Hamas, the establishment of a temporary UN-led stabilization mission, and a halt to Israeli settlement expansion.

Prince Faisal expressed hope that the two-state solution could be realized soon, describing it as the only viable path to lasting peace and stability in the region.

“Is it in the near future? I certainly hope it is because that’s the only pathway for hope, for all of us in the region to live in security and stability in a way that’s sustainable,” he said.

Prince Faisal noted that the foundations of a future Palestinian state are already established under international law, and that a sustainable peace would require final-status negotiations to move forward in good faith.

“The building blocks are there. It’s clear in the founding UN resolutions that established the State of Israel,” he said.

“There was also a clear understanding of the foundation of the State of Palestine. The 1967 borders are understood by international law to form the borders of the state of Palestine.

On the situation in Gaza, Prince Faisal emphasized the scale of the international response and humanitarian support, but warned that reconstruction must be part of a long-term solution, not another short-term fix.

“I think we’ve seen, just by the significant outpouring of aid just for the emergency relief of Gaza, that there’s a commitment to the rebuilding of Gaza,” he said.

“But what I do want to make clear is that it’s absolutely necessary that when we transition, hopefully soon, to a ceasefire, that this won’t be a temporary state of affairs.

“I think it’s unacceptable that we come to the international community to ask them to come together to rebuild Gaza when it was destroyed by Israel, only for the potential of the situation on the ground to exist where this could all happen again.”

He stressed the need for reconstruction efforts to be sustainable and tied directly to a political resolution.

“I think it’s absolutely critical, hand in hand with the immediate relief of the situation in Gaza, that that reconstruction be ensured to be sustainable, that we do it once and for all.

“And there again comes the need for a final agreement on the status of Palestine, through the Palestinian state.”

Prince Faisal also told reporters in New York that Arab and Muslim countries made clear to US President Donald Trump the dangers of Israeli annexation of the West Bank.

“Some countries made very clear to the president the danger of annexation of any type in the West Bank and the risk that poses not just to the potential of peace in Gaza, but also to any sustainable peace at all.

“And I feel confident that President Trump understood the position of the Arab and Muslim countries.”


Trump: ‘I will not allow Israel to annex West Bank’

Trump: ‘I will not allow Israel to annex West Bank’
Updated 54 min 25 sec ago

Trump: ‘I will not allow Israel to annex West Bank’

Trump: ‘I will not allow Israel to annex West Bank’
  • 'It’s time to stop now,' the US president said of calls from Israeli politicians to extend sovereignty over the Palestinian territory
  • Trump made the comments after speaking with Netanyahu about the Gaza war

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday he will not allow Israel to annex the occupied West Bank, rejecting calls from some far-right politicians in Israel who want to extend sovereignty over the area.
Trump addressed the topic after what he described as a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss resolving the Gaza conflict.
“I will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank. Nope, I will not allow it. It’s not going to happen,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
Netanyahu has faced some pressure from right-wing allies to annex the West Bank, prompting alarm among Arab leaders, some of whom met on Tuesday with Trump on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
“I’m not allowing Israel to annex the West Bank. There’s been enough. It’s time to stop now,” he said.
Israel captured the West Bank in a 1967 war. The Palestinians have long sought it for a future state, along with East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip.
About 700,000 Israeli settlers live among 2.7 million Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, which Israel annexed in a move not recognized by most countries.
Israel refuses to cede control of the West Bank, a position it says has been reinforced since the Hamas-led militant attack on its territory, launched from Gaza October 7, 2023.


Libyan leader urges UN to back full sovereignty, elections, end to foreign interference

Libyan leader urges UN to back full sovereignty, elections, end to foreign interference
Updated 26 September 2025

Libyan leader urges UN to back full sovereignty, elections, end to foreign interference

Libyan leader urges UN to back full sovereignty, elections, end to foreign interference
  • Mohamed Al-Menfi urges world to view country as ‘a story of resilience and will’
  • Libya must no longer be treated as ‘a battleground for settling scores or exporting crises’

LONDON: The chairman of Libya’s Presidential Council on Thursday urged the international community to support a Libyan-led political process that restores the country’s full sovereignty, ends foreign interference, and paves the way for free and transparent elections.

Addressing the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, Mohamed Al-Menfi said his country must no longer be treated as a “battleground for settling scores or exporting crises,” but as a nation with the resources, youth and history to build a modern and democratic state.

He outlined a four-point plan for moving beyond years of conflict: restoring national sovereignty free from external interference; achieving broad-based consensus through inclusive dialogue inside Libya; unifying sovereign institutions such as security, defense and financial bodies; and ending the transitional phase with elections based on a clear constitutional framework.

“Any solution that doesn’t return ownership of the political process to the Libyan people, and doesn’t emanate from their free will, is doomed to repeat failure,” he said.

Al-Menfi highlighted efforts to preserve stability and avoid renewed violence, pointing to the October 2020 ceasefire agreement and security arrangements in Tripoli as evidence of progress. 

He said “Libyan blood is a red line,” and the country’s sovereignty, unity and social fabric are non-negotiable.

Speaking about the Libyan economy, he highlighted the challenges posed by institutional division and the absence of a unified budget, but said the country still has the capacity to play a pivotal role in its own recovery. 

He called for greater global support for economic development, including through the High Financial Committee and UN cooperation, to unify public spending and ensure fair wealth distribution.

Turning to the issue of migration, he urged the international community to move away from narrow security responses and adopt a detailed developmental approach in partnership with the African Union. 

“Irregular migration isn’t merely a security issue, but a humanitarian challenge rooted in deep economic causes,” he said.

On Palestine, Al-Menfi condemned the “unethical neutrality” by some UN member states regarding Israel’s war on Gaza, as well as “crimes of genocide and blatant violations of international law” against the Palestinian people. 

He called for urgent international action to end the Israeli occupation and secure Palestinian rights.

Concluding his address, Al-Menfi urged the world to view Libya as “a story of resilience and will” rather than as a complicated political problem to avoid.

“Libya’s future is that of a sovereign, stable state, united in its institutions, strong through its people, reconciled with itself, open to the world, and an active partner regionally and internationally,” he said.