Lebanese army to begin disarming Palestinians in Beirut camps in mid-June
Lebanese army to begin disarming Palestinians in Beirut camps in mid-June/node/2601879/middle-east
Lebanese army to begin disarming Palestinians in Beirut camps in mid-June
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People walk past a portrait of Palestinian Hamas movementâs slain political chief Ismail Haniyeh in a narrow alleyway at the Burj al Barajneh camp for Palestinian refugees in Beirutâs southern suburbs on May 20, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 23 May 2025
NAJIA HOUSSARI
Lebanese army to begin disarming Palestinians in Beirut camps in mid-June
The Lebanese and Palestinian sides agreed on starting a plan âto remove weapons from the camps, beginning mid-June,â the source told AFP
By longstanding convention, the Lebanese army stays out of the Palestinian camps
Updated 23 May 2025
NAJIA HOUSSARI
BEIRUT: The joint Lebanese-Palestinian committee, which convened on Friday in the presence of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam of Lebanon, agreed to begin implementing the directives outlined in the joint statement issued by the Lebanese-Palestinian summit held on Wednesday in Beirut, in terms of restricting weapons to the hands of the Lebanese state.
A source in Salamâs office told Arab News: âJune 16 will mark the beginning of the Lebanese armyâs deployment to Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut, namely Shatila, Mar Elias and Burj Al-Barajneh camps, to take control of the Palestinian factionsâ weapons.
âThis will involve Lebanese army patrols inside these camps, followed by subsequent phases targeting camps in the Bekaa, northern Lebanon and south, particularly Ain Al-Hilweh, the largest, most densely populated and factionally diverse Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, encompassing factions affiliated or non-affiliated with the liberation organization.
The source said the âimplementation date will be communicated to all Palestinian factions, including Hamas,â and that âthe factions will convene to agree on the mechanism, and that pressure will be applied to any group that refuses to relinquish its weapons.â
Addressing Hamasâs earlier stance linking the surrender of its weapons to that of Hezbollah, the source said âthere is no connection between the two issues. Once the disarmament process begins, neither Hamas nor any other faction will be able to obstruct or impede it.â
The source said that Arab and regional actors are actively supporting Lebanon in facilitating the disarmament process.
Salam welcomed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbasâs decision to âresolve the issue of Palestinian weapons in the camps,â noting the âpositive impact of this decision in strengthening Lebanese-Palestinian relations and improving the humanitarian and socio-economic conditions of Palestinian refugees.â
He affirmed Lebanonâs âadherence to its national principles.â
Salam called for âthe swift implementation of practical steps through a clear execution mechanism and a defined timeline.â
According to a statement, both sides agreed âto launch a process to hand over weapons based on a set timetable, accompanied by practical steps to enhance the economic and social rights of Palestinian refugees, and to intensify joint meetings and coordination to put in place the necessary arrangements to immediately begin implementing these directives.â
A statement issued after talks between Abbas and Joseph Aoun, Lebanonâs president, reaffirmed âtheir commitment to the principle that weapons must be exclusively in the hands of the Lebanese state, to end any manifestations that contradict the logic of the Lebanese state, and the importance of respecting Lebanonâs sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity.â
Since the Nakba â the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians through their violent displacement and dispossession of land, and the suppression of their political rights â Lebanon has had 12 Palestinian refugee camps.
According to the Population and Housing Census in the Palestinian Camps and Gatherings in Lebanon, 72.8 percent of Palestinians in the camps face dire living conditions. The rest are Syrians, Lebanese, and other foreigners, the majority of whom are foreign workers.
Abbas, during his visit, reiterated that âthe refugee camps are under the sovereignty of the Lebanese state and the Lebanese army, and the presence of weapons in the camps outside the stateâs authority weakens Lebanon. Any weapon that is not under the command of the state is weakening Lebanon and endangering the Palestinian cause.â
Hisham Debsi, director of the Tatweer Center for Strategic Studies and Human Development and a Palestinian researcher, characterized the Lebanese-Palestinian joint statement as âa foundational document that functions as a political, ethical, and sovereign framework. Opposition to its declared positions would be tantamount to rejecting the Lebanese governmentâs oath of office and ministerial declaration.â
Debsi said: âThe joint statement has blocked any potential maneuvering by Hamas to retain its weapons, since the declaration provides the Lebanese state with complete Palestinian legitimacy to remove protection from any armed Palestinian individual. Abu Mazen (Abbas) has reinforced this position repeatedly throughout his Beirut meetings.â
In his assessment, âno faction can now challenge both Lebanese and Palestinian authority given this unified stance.â
Debsi highlighted âa fundamental division within Hamasâs Lebanon branch, with one camp advocating transformation into a political party with the other supporting maintaining ties to Iranian-backed groups.â
He added: âThose opposing Hamas disarmament will face political and security consequences, particularly as camp residents seek to restructure their communities beyond armed resistance, which has become obsolete and must evolve into peaceful advocacy.â
âWhat are these wars for?â: Arab town in Israel shattered by Iran strike
The level of destruction from the missiles has been unprecedented in Israel, even after 20 months of continuous war in the wake of the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks
Updated 19 sec ago
AFP
TAMRA, Israel: An Arab town in northern Israel paid a heavy price for the ongoing air war between Iran and Israel when a ballistic missile slammed into a home there, killing four people and upending life in the small community.
Hundreds of sobbing residents crowded the narrow streets of Tamra on Tuesday to watch as the wooden coffins adorned with colorful wreaths were carried to the townâs cemetery.
To some, the Iranian strike highlighted the unequal protections afforded Israelâs Arab minority, while to others, it merely underscored the cruel indifference of war.
Raja Khatib has been left to pick up the pieces from an attack that killed his wife, two of his daughters and a sister in law.
âI wish to myself, if only the missile would have hit me as well. And I would be with them, and I wouldnât be suffering anymore,â Khatib told AFP.
âLearn from me: no more victims. Stop the war.â
After five days of fighting, at least 24 people have been killed in Israel and hundreds more wounded by the repeated barrages launched from Iran.
Israelâs sophisticated air defense systems have managed to intercept a majority of the missiles and drones targeting the country.
But some have managed to slip through.
With some projectiles roughly the size of a train carriage and carrying a payload that can weigh hundreds of kilograms, Iranâs ballistic missiles can be devastating upon impact.
A single strike can destroy large swaths of a city block and rip gaping holes in an apartment building, while the shockwave can shatter windows and wreak havoc on the surrounding area.
The level of destruction from the missiles has been unprecedented in Israel, even after 20 months of continuous war in the wake of the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks.
Along with Tamra, barrages have also hit residential areas in Tel Aviv, Bnei Brak, Petah Tikva and Haifa.
As the coffins made their way through Tamra on Tuesday, a group of women tended to a relative of the victims who had become faint with grief, dabbing cold water on her cheeks and forehead.
At the cemetery, men embraced and young girls cried at the foot of the freshly dug graves.
Iran has continued to fire daily salvos since Israel launched a surprise air campaign that it says is aimed at preventing the Islamic republic from acquiring nuclear weapons â an ambition Tehran denies.
In Iran, Israelâs wide-ranging air strikes have killed at least 224 people, including military commanders, nuclear scientists and civilians.
Despite mounting calls to de-escalate, neither side has backed off from the fighting.
In Israel, frequent air raid alerts have kept residents close to bomb shelters, while streets across the country have largely emptied and shops shuttered.
But some in the countryâs Arab minority have said the government has done too little to protect them, pointing to unequal access to public shelters used to weather the barrages.
Most of Israelâs Arab minority identify as Palestinians who remained in what is now Israel after its creation in 1948. They represent about 20 percent of the countryâs population.
The community frequently professes to face discrimination from Israelâs Jewish majority.
âThe state, unfortunately, still distinguishes between blood and blood,â Ayman Odeh, an Israeli parliamentarian of Palestinian descent, wrote on social media after touring Tamra earlier this week.
âTamra is not a village. It is a city without public shelters,â Odeh added, saying that this was the case for 60 percent of âlocal authoritiesâ â the Israeli term for communities not officially registered as cities, many of which are majority Arab.
But for residents like Khatib, the damage has already been done.
âWhat are these wars for? Letâs make peace, for the sake of the two people,â he said.
âI am a Muslim. This missile killed Muslims. Did it differentiate between Jews and Muslims? No, when it hits, it doesnât distinguish between people.â
Iran will reportedly share images of captured Israeli fighter jet pilots âsoonâ
Tehran said on Friday that 2 Israeli F-35 pilots were in custody, one of them a woman
Israel has not said whether it lost any pilots during initial surprise attack on Iranian targets 5 days ago
Updated 24 min 7 sec ago
Arab News
RIYADH: Iran will share images of captured Israeli F-35 pilots âsoon,â the Tehran Times reported on Tuesday.
Authorities in Iran said on Friday that two Israeli fighter jet pilots were in custody, one of them a woman. Israel has yet to confirm whether any of its pilots were missing following the initial surprise attack on Iranian targets on Friday morning.
Missile and drone attacks by both countries against each other have continued every day since then, prompting growing fears that the fighting could spiral out of control and spark a major regional conflict.
Also on Tuesday, Iranian media reported that a âterrorist teamâ linked to Israel and armed with explosives had been arrested in a town southwest of Tehran.
What Israelâs bombing of Iranâs state broadcaster says about its targeting of journalists
Israeli forces struck Iranâs state broadcaster IRIB on Monday, killing two staff and injuring others during a live broadcast
Press freedom advocates say the Tehran strike echoes Israelâs pattern of targeting media in Gaza and the West Bank
Updated 15 min 56 sec ago
GABRIELE MALVISI
LONDON: In what press freedom groups say is only the latest in a string of attacks on media workers, the Israeli military on Monday struck the headquarters of the state-owned Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting network in Tehran.
The attack, which interrupted a live broadcast, killed at least two members of staff â news editor Nima Rajabpour and secretariat worker Masoumeh Azimi â and injured several others, according to state-affiliated media.
In footage widely shared online, Sahar Emami, an anchor for the Islamic Republic of Iran News Network, was seen fleeing the studio as the screen behind her filled with smoke. Moments earlier, she had told viewers: âYou hear the sound of the aggressor attacking the truth.â
The strike destroyed the building â known as the Glass Building â which burned through the night. Israel immediately claimed responsibility.
Defense Minister Israel Katz had issued a warning less than an hour earlier, calling IRIB a âpropaganda and incitement megaphone,â urging up to 330,000 nearby residents to evacuate.
The attack drew swift condemnation from Iranian officials. Esmaeil Baqaei, spokesperson for Iranâs Foreign Ministry, called it âa wicked act of war crime,â urging the international community to demand justice from Israel for its attack on the media.
NUMBER
70%
Israel is responsible for the majority of journalist killings globally in 2024, the highest number by a single country in one year since the Committee to Protect Journalists began documenting this data in 1992.
Source: CPJ
âThe world is watching,â Baqaei wrote on X. âIsraeli regime is the biggest enemy of truth and is the No#1 killer of journalists and media people.â
Over the past week, the long-running shadow war between Israel and Iran has escalated dramatically. On Friday, Israel launched a series of airstrikes on Iranian nuclear and military facilities, including the Natanz enrichment site.
With the stated aim of preventing Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon, the strikes caused significant damage to the countryâs nuclear infrastructure and military command structure, with multiple high-ranking commanders killed.
Mourners attend the funeral of members of the press who were killed in an Israeli strike, at the Al-Awda Hospital in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on December 26, 2024. (AFP)
Iran has retaliated with missile barrages targeting Israeli cities and military bases. Civilian casualties have mounted on both sides, and major cities like Tehran and Tel Aviv have experienced widespread panic and disruption.
The Israeli attack on IRIB shows media workers are not exempt from the violence.
Sara Qudah, regional director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said she was âappalled by Israelâs attack on Iranâs state television channel,â noting that the lack of international censure âhas emboldened it to target media elsewhere in the region.â
There is absolutely no logical reason for Israel to target a media outlet in Iran that poses no threat to anyone, says Peyman Jebelli, Head of IRIB
Loreley Hahn Herrera, lecturer in global media and digital cultures at SOAS University of London, echoed this view.
âThe exceptional status through which Western powers have historically shielded Israel has allowed it to systematically commit international law and human rights violations without ever being held accountable or suffer any legal, financial, military or diplomatic repercussions,â she told Arab News.
âThis has indeed emboldened Israel to attack not only Palestine and Iran. In the last months, Israel has broken the ceasefire in Lebanon, bombed Yemen, and Syria as well.â
Palestinian journalist Mohammed Al-Zaanin waits at Nasser hospital for treatment after sustaining injuries during Israeli bombardment of the Bani Suheila district in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 22, 2024. (AFP)
Israelâs treatment of media workers in combat zones has long been documented by press freedom organizations. Despite repeated calls for accountability, Israel has consistently evaded consequences.
âIsrael has a sophisticated political communication strategy which rests on its hasbara (propaganda) that has worked hand in hand with its material strategies to control the public spaces in the West through repeating narratives about victimhood and its right to defend itself,â Dina Matar, professor of political communication and Arab media at SOAS, told Arab News.
Mondayâs strike in Tehran closely mirrors Israelâs record in Gaza and the West Bank since Oct. 7, 2023. Under the banner of âeliminating terrorists,â Israel has killed at least 183 journalists in Palestine and Lebanon, according to CPJ. Others put the figure closer to 220.
This frame grab from a video released by Iran state TV shows the network building on fire after an Israeli drone attack, June 16, 2025, in Tehran, Iran. (Iran state TV, IRINN via AP)
A separate report published in April by the Costs of War project at Brown University described the Gaza conflict as âthe worst ever for journalists.â
Titled âNews Graveyards: How Dangers to War Reporters Endanger the World,â the study concluded that more journalists have been killed in Gaza than in all major US wars combined.
The report was swiftly attacked by Israeli nationalists, who dismissed it as âgarbageâ and factually flawed for not linking the journalists killed to militant activity.
A tribute for slain Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is shown during an observation of the 75th anniversary of the Nakba in the General Assembly Hall at the United Nations on May 15, 2023 in New York City. (AFP)
âThere is no policy of targeting journalists,â a senior Israeli officer said last year, attributing the deaths to the scale and intensity of the bombardment.
But Hahn Herrera disagrees.
âIsrael is not only targeting journalists, it is targeting the families of the journalists as a strategy to deter their coverage and punish them for reporting the war crimes Israel commits on a daily basis in occupied Palestine,â she said.
Palestinian journalists lift placards during a rally in protest of the killing of fellow reporters Hussam Shabat and Muhammad Mansour in Israeli strikes a day earlier, at the al-Ahli Arab hospital, also known as the Baptist hospital, in Gaza City on March 25, 2025. (AFP)
Hahn Herrera cited several examples where Israel appeared to punish journalists by targeting their families. One case was that of Al Jazeeraâs Gaza bureau chief, Wael Dahdouh, who was broadcasting live when he learned that his wife, daughter, son, and grandchild had been killed in an Israeli airstrike in October 2023.
A more recent case involved photojournalist Fatima Hassouna, who was killed alongside several family members. Both attacks, Israel claimed, were aimed at Hamas operatives, but critics say they reflect a broader strategy of silencing coverage through collective punishment.
Yet accusations of Israelâs targeting of journalists precede the last 20 months.
Mourners and colleagues holding 'press' signs surround the body of Al-Jazeera Arabic journalist Ismail al-Ghoul, killed along with his cameraman Rami al-Refee in an Israeli strike during their coverage of Gaza's Al-Shati refugee camp, on July 31, 2024. (AFP)
âIsrael has a long and documented history of targeting Palestinian journalists,â said Matar, pointing to the 1972 assassination of writer Ghassan Kanafani in Beirut.
A prominent Palestinian author and militant, Kanafani was considered to be a leading novelist of his generation and one of the Arab worldâs leading Palestinian writers.
He was killed along with his 17-year-old niece, Lamees, by an explosive device planted in his car by Mossad, in one of the first known extrajudicial killings for which the Israeli spy agency ever claimed responsibility.
Relatives over the body of journalist Ahmed Mansur at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on April 8, 2025. (AFP)
More recently, in May 2022, Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was shot dead by an Israeli soldier during a raid in Jenin, despite wearing a press vest. Initial Israeli claims blaming Palestinian fire were quickly disproven by independent investigations and the UN.
A 2025 documentary identified the suspected shooter, but no one has been held accountable.
Foreign media workers have also been killed. In 2014, Italian journalist Simone Camilli and his Palestinian colleague Ali Shehda Abu Afash died when an unexploded Israeli bomb detonated while they were reporting in Gaza.
This frame grab from a video released by Iran state TV shows anchor Sahar Emami amid an explosion from an Israeli attack during a live TV broadcast, June 16, 2025, in Tehran, Iran. (Iran state TV, IRINN via AP)
In 2003, Welsh documentarian James Miller was fatally shot by Israeli forces while filming in Rafah.
A year earlier, Italian photojournalist Raffaele Ciriello â on assignment for Corriere della Sera â was shot dead by Israeli gunfire in Ramallah during the Second Intifada, becoming the first foreign journalist killed in that conflict.
No one has been held accountable in any of these cases.
âThe reason behind Israelâs targeting and killing of journalists is to send a clear message and instill fear of reporting Israelâs military campaign in Gaza and the West Bank, as it can carry the consequence of death and/or injury,â said Hahn Herrera, who noted Israelâs refusal to allow international media into Gaza as part of a wider strategy to monopolize the narrative.
âThis is an attempt to minimize or flat out stop any negative coverage of Israeli actions in Gaza and the rest of the occupied territories,â she said. âIsrael does not want international media, and particularly Western media, to cover their genocide campaign and their ongoing and systematic war crimes ⊠and push further the delegitimization of Israel.â
While Israel has so far refused to grant broader media access to the enclave, Western news organizations and human rights groups have attempted to push back against the Israeli narrative, arguing that affiliation with outlets like Al-Aqsa TV or Iranâs state broadcaster IRIB does not justify extrajudicial killings.
âNews outlets, even propagandist ones, are not legitimate military targets,â the Freedom of the Press Foundation said in a statement on Monday. âBombing a studio during a live broadcast will not impede Iranâs nuclear program.â
As the conflict with Iran escalates, incidents like Mondayâs bombing are likely to face growing scrutiny. For many observers, Israelâs actions are becoming increasingly indefensible, and international tolerance for such attacks may be nearing its limit.
âThe international community has played an important role in allowing Israel to act in this manner,â said Hahn Herrera.
âSince its establishment in 1948, and even before that though the Balfour Declaration in 1917, the West has protected Israel in the international relations arena.
âThe best example of this is the use of the US veto in the UN Security Council or the ever-present declarations that Israel âhas a right to defend itselfâ by European and American political leadership.
âUntil the international community effectively implements sanctions, stops funding and arming Israel, we will only continue to witness Israelâs brazen violations of international and human rights law.
âWe cannot expect Israel to self-regulate because Israel is not a democracy. Its political and legal systems are subservient to the Zionist ideology of colonization and racial supremacy, and will act to satisfy these aims.â
UAE warns against âmiscalculated actionsâ in Israeli-Iranian conflict, calls for immediate ceasefire
Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan says Emirati leadership is dedicated to promotion of stability, prosperity and justice
He highlights âthe risks of reckless and miscalculated actions that could extend beyond the bordersâ of Israel and Iran
Updated 17 June 2025
Arab News
LONDON: As military exchanges between Israel and Iran continued on Tuesday for a fifth consecutive day, the UAEâs minister of foreign affairs, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, warned of the wider threat posed by the continuing conflict and called for an immediate ceasefire.
âThere is no alternative to political and diplomatic solutions,â he said, calling on the UN and its Security Council to intervene and halt the escalating violence.
He also highlighted âthe risks of reckless and miscalculated actions that could extend beyond the bordersâ of Israel and Iran, the Emirates News Agency reported.
The UAE believes âa diplomatic approach is urgently required to lead both parties toward deescalation, end hostilities, and prevent the situation from spiraling into grave and far-reaching consequences,â he added.
The goal of international diplomacy, he said, must be to immediately halt hostilities, prevent the conflict from spiraling out of control, and mitigate its effects on global peace and security.
The UAE condemned the Israeli airstrikes on Iran that began on Friday, which have targeted nuclear sites, military leaders, intelligence chiefs and atomic scientists. Iran has responded by firing ballistic missiles at Israeli towns and cities along the Mediterranean, including Tel Aviv, Rishon LeZion and Haifa.
Sheikh Abdullah said the Emirati leadership is dedicated to the promotion of stability, prosperity and justice, and he stressed the urgent need for wisdom in a region long embroiled in conflicts.
âThe UAE believes that promoting dialogue, adhering to international law and respecting the sovereignty of states are essential principles for resolving the current crises,â he added.
âThe UAE calls on the United Nations and the Security Council to fully uphold their responsibilities by preventing further escalation, and taking urgent and necessary measures to achieve a ceasefire and reinforce international peace and security.â
At least 60 people feared missing in two deadly shipwrecks off Libya, IOM says
IOM says shipwrecks happened off the Libyan coast
Updated 17 June 2025
Reuters
CAIRO: At least 60 people were feared missing at sea after two deadly shipwrecks off the coast of Libya in recent days, the International Organization for Migration said on Tuesday.