Syria authorities accuse Hezbollah of killing three soldiers

A member of security forces loyal to the interim Syrian government speaks on a cell phone while standing by the Mediterranean sea coast in Latakia. (File/AFP)
A member of security forces loyal to the interim Syrian government speaks on a cell phone while standing by the Mediterranean sea coast in Latakia. (File/AFP)
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Updated 17 March 2025

Syria authorities accuse Hezbollah of killing three soldiers

A member of security forces loyal to the interim Syrian government speaks on a cell phone while standing by Mediterranean sea.
  • Hezbollah in a statement denied any involvement in clashes with Syrian security forces or in Syrian territory
  • Group was a key backer of Syria’s former president Bashar Assad before he was toppled in a lightning offensive

DAMASCUS: Syria’s defense ministry on Sunday accused Lebanon’s Hezbollah group of abducting three soldiers to Lebanon and killing them there, state media reported, as Hezbollah denied any involvement in clashes.
“A group from the Hezbollah militia... kidnapped three members of the Syrian army on the Syrian-Lebanese border... before taking them to Lebanese territory and eliminating them,” the news agency SANA quoted the defense ministry as saying.
“The defense ministry will take all the necessary measures after this dangerous escalation from the Hezbollah militia,” it added of the incident which it said occurred near the Zeita Dam, west of Homs.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah in a statement denied any involvement in clashes with Syrian security forces or in Syrian territory.
The group said it “categorically denies any connection to the events taking place today on the Lebanese-Syrian border.”
It added that it “reaffirms its previous announcements that Hezbollah has no relation to any events within Syrian territory.”
Lebanon’s state news agency NNA reported that rockets fired from Syrian territory had landed in the Lebanese village of Qasr near the border.
“A number of rockets, fired from the Qusayr countryside inside Syrian territory, fell on the border town of Qasr,” it said, without providing further details.
Hezbollah was a key backer of Syria’s former president Bashar Assad before he was toppled in a lightning offensive by militants in December.
The country’s new authorities announced last month the launch of a security campaign in the border province of Homs, aimed at shutting down routes used for arms and goods smuggling.
They accused Hezbollah of launching attacks, saying it was sponsoring cross-border smuggling gangs.


Iraq records over 55% voter turnout in parliamentary elections

Iraq records over 55% voter turnout in parliamentary elections
Updated 6 sec ago

Iraq records over 55% voter turnout in parliamentary elections

Iraq records over 55% voter turnout in parliamentary elections
  • The commission confirmed the total number of voters across both general and special voting reached 12,003,143

DUBAI: Voter turnout in Iraq’s parliamentary elections exceeded 55 percent, the Independent High Electoral Commission announced on Tuesday.

The organization said it had received results from 99.7 percent of polling stations nationwide, where more than 12 million citizens took part in both general and special voting.

The commission said 10,898,327 out of 20,063,773 registered voters took part in the general voting, a turnout of over 54 percent.

Meanwhile, special voting on Nov. 9 saw 1,084,289 out of 1,313,980 registered eligible voters take part, including members of security forces and other special categories.

The IHEC also reported that 20,527 displaced people out of 26,538 registered voters took part, resulting in a 77 percent turnout in polling stations designated for those citizens.

The commission confirmed the total number of voters across both general and special voting reached 12,003,143 out of 21,404,291 registered voters, placing national turnout at just above 55 percent.