Israel strike kills one in Lebanon: ministry

Update Israel strike kills one in Lebanon: ministry
Rescuers carry a body to an ambulance after a car was hit by a reported Israeli strike in the Masnaa area in eastern Lebanon on Aug. 7, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 16 min 51 sec ago

Israel strike kills one in Lebanon: ministry

Israel strike kills one in Lebanon: ministry
  • It comes a day after Israeli strikes killed seven people in the eastern Bekaa Valley, two of them members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
  • The man killed in Friday’s strike in Nabatiyeh district, Mohammad Shahadeh

BEIRUT: An Israeli strike killed one person in southern Lebanon on Friday, the Lebanese health ministry said, in the latest attack despite a November ceasefire.

It comes a day after Israeli strikes killed seven people in the eastern Bekaa Valley, two of them members of leftist militant group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

The man killed in Friday’s strike in Nabatiyeh district, Mohammad Shahadeh, ran a local news website and colleagues took to social media to offer their condolences to his family.

Social media users circulated an obituary released by Hezbollah, which described him as a “martyr on the road to Jerusalem,” the term the group uses for members killed in fighting with Israel.

The PFLP meanwhile mourned “commander and Central Committee member, Mohammad Khalil Wishah” and “field commander Mufid Hassan Hussein, who were martyred yesterday (Thursday) in a treacherous Zionist assassination crime on the road between Syria and Lebanon.”

The Israeli military confirmed the strike, saying Wishah had served in the PFLP’s “military-security department in Syria” since his predecessor was assassinated in an Israeli air strike in Beirut in September.

The military alleged that Wishah “recently operated to advance military operations against Israeli targets.”

Israel has repeatedly struck Lebanon despite last year’s truce and has threatened to continue its attacks until Hezbollah has been disarmed.

This week, the Lebanese government agreed an end of year target for the disarmament of the militant group and tasked the army with drawing up a plan by the end of August.


Turkish foreign minister to discuss Israel’s Gaza City plan in Egypt visit, source says

Turkish foreign minister to discuss Israel’s Gaza City plan in Egypt visit, source says
Updated 08 August 2025

Turkish foreign minister to discuss Israel’s Gaza City plan in Egypt visit, source says

Turkish foreign minister to discuss Israel’s Gaza City plan in Egypt visit, source says
  • Fidan will meet El-Sisi and other officials to discuss bilateral ties and regional issues, including the Gaza ceasefire negotiations
  • Fidan will also discuss developments in Africa, including in Libya, Sudan and Somalia

ANKARA: Turkiye’s foreign minister will travel to Egypt on Saturday for talks with senior officials on Israel’s plan to take control of Gaza City and on the humanitarian situation there, a Turkish Foreign Ministry source said on Friday.

Israel’s political-security cabinet approved a plan early on Friday to take control of Gaza City, as it expands its military operations despite growing domestic and international criticism over the devastating almost two-year-old war.

NATO member Turkiye, which has said Israel’s assault on Gaza amounts to a genocide and halted all trade with it, condemned the plan of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “fundamentalist government,” and urged world powers and the United Nations Security Council to act to prevent its implementation.

During his visit to Cairo, Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan will meet Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and other officials to discuss bilateral ties and regional issues, including the Gaza ceasefire negotiations — mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States — as well as Israel’s takeover plan, the source said.

Fidan will “evaluate joint efforts to end the genocide in Gaza and allow the unhindered access of humanitarian aid into Gaza, emphasize that the occupying Israel’s actions targeting a two-state solution and its latest steps toward the annexation of Gaza are the biggest obstacle to regional peace and stability,” the source said.

Ankara has praised Egypt, Qatar and the United States for their mediation efforts between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas, whose attack in 2023 prompted Israel’s war on Gaza. It has rejected any Gaza takeover plans or attempts to displace Palestinians.

Fidan will also discuss developments in Africa, including in Libya, Sudan and Somalia, the person added.


Belgium summons Israeli ambassador over Gaza control plan

Belgium summons Israeli ambassador over Gaza control plan
Updated 08 August 2025

Belgium summons Israeli ambassador over Gaza control plan

Belgium summons Israeli ambassador over Gaza control plan
  • “The aim is clearly to express our total disapproval of this decision,” Prevot posted on X

BRUSSELS: Belgium said Friday that it was summoning the Israeli ambassador over Israel’s plans to “take military control” of the Palestinian territory of Gaza.


“The aim is clearly to express our total disapproval of this decision, but also of the continued colonization,” Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot posted on X.


EU chief says Israel must reconsider Gaza control plan

EU chief says Israel must reconsider Gaza control plan
Updated 08 August 2025

EU chief says Israel must reconsider Gaza control plan

EU chief says Israel must reconsider Gaza control plan
  • She urged the release of all hostages and the “immediate and unhindered access” for aid

BRUSSELS: EU chief Ursula von der Leyen called on Israel on Friday to reconsider its plan to further extend the military’s control over the Palestinian territory of Gaza.

“The Israeli government’s decision to further extend its military operation in Gaza must be reconsidered,” she said on X.


She also urged the release of all hostages and the “immediate and unhindered access” for humanitarian aid in Gaza. “A ceasefire is needed now.”

 


Germany stops military exports that could be used in Gaza

Germany stops military exports that could be used in Gaza
Updated 08 August 2025

Germany stops military exports that could be used in Gaza

Germany stops military exports that could be used in Gaza
  • The move by Germany appears likely to further isolate Israel in the wake of the controversial military takeover plan
  • Chancellor Friedrich Merz calls on Israel to allow comprehensive access for aid deliveries

BERLIN: Germany will not authorize any exports of military equipment that could be used in Gaza “until further notice,” Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced Friday, in a strikingly quick response by one of Israel’s strongest international backers to a decision by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Cabinet to take over Gaza City.

The move by Germany, which has previously stopped short of tougher lines against Israel’s government taken by some of its European Union allies, appeared likely to further isolate Israel in the wake of the controversial military takeover plan that has been decried by the United Nations and supporters of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza.

In a statement, Merz emphasized that Israel “has the right to defend itself against Hamas’ terror” and said that the release of Israeli hostages and purposeful negotiations toward a ceasefire in the 22-month conflict “are our top priority.”

He said Hamas must not have a role in the future of Gaza.

“The even harsher military action by the Israeli army in the Gaza Strip, approved by the Israeli Cabinet last night, makes it increasingly difficult for the German government to see how these goals will be achieved,” he added. “Under these circumstances, the German government will not authorize any exports of military equipment that could be used in the Gaza Strip until further notice.”

The German government remains deeply concerned about the suffering of civilians in Gaza, he said, adding: “With the planned offensive, the Israeli government bears even greater responsibility than before for providing for their needs.”

He called on Israel to allow comprehensive access for aid deliveries – including for UN organizations and other NGOs – and said Israel “must continue to comprehensively and sustainably address the humanitarian situation in Gaza.”

Germany also called on Israel’s government “not to take any further steps toward annexing the West Bank.”

It was not immediately clear which military equipment from Germany would be affected.

Germany, with its history with the Holocaust, has been among the strongest Western backers of Israel – no matter which government is in power. Merz’s government did not join announcements by President Emmanuel Macron of key German ally France and Britain’s Keir Starmer that they plan to formally recognize a Palestinian state in September.


Iraq divided over future of pro-Iran armed alliance

Iraq divided over future of pro-Iran armed alliance
Updated 08 August 2025

Iraq divided over future of pro-Iran armed alliance

Iraq divided over future of pro-Iran armed alliance
  • A bill in Iraq that would further formalize the role — and perhaps, the autonomy — of a powerful coalition of pro-Iran former paramilitaries has sparked a heated debate, fanned in part by US pressure
  • Formed in 2014 when Iraqis were urged to take up arms against the jihadists of the Daesh group, the Hashed is a powerful force with major military and political clout

BAGHDAD: A bill in Iraq that would further formalize the role — and perhaps, the autonomy — of a powerful coalition of pro-Iran former paramilitaries has sparked a heated debate, fanned in part by US pressure.
Few details of the bill that could decide the future of the Hashed Al-Shaabi alliance have been made public.
Formed in 2014 when Iraqis were urged to take up arms against the jihadists of the Daesh group, the Hashed is a powerful force with major military and political clout.
The bill aims at regulating and restructuring the alliance of a myriad of armed groups, which together have more than 200,000 fighters and employees.
Not mincing words, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said the proposed legislation “would institutionalize Iranian influence and armed terrorist groups undermining Iraq’s sovereignty.”
An Iraqi government official, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said opponents of the bill say it “seems to establish something similar to the Revolutionary Guards” in Iran — a powerful military force imbued with the Islamic republic’s ideology.
The aim, according to political scientist Renad Mansour, is to integrate the Hashed “even more into the state.”
“Some argue that this is an important first step, because it’s better to have them in this system than outside the system, where they could be spoilers,” said Mansour, a senior research fellow at Chatham House think tank.
But others, he added, “argue that this is a further way for the Hashed to consolidate its power,” giving the alliance “access to greater funds, greater intelligence, and other kind of equipment and technology.”
The debate around the bill comes at a time of heightened regional tensions and upheavals, as the Gaza war reverberates across the Middle East.
Iranian allies and proxies have been weakened in wars with Israel, which has Washington’s backing. In Lebanon, Tehran-backed group Hezbollah faces a government push to disarm it by the end of the year.
In recent years, the Iraqi armed factions have seen their clout grow, with some gaining seats in parliament and in government, even as several group leaders — including the Hashed’s top commander — have been subjected to US sanctions.
In 2022 the coalition was granted a public works enterprise, Al-Muhandis, with capital worth tens of millions of dollars.
Responding to Washington’s concerns, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani has defended the proposed bill as “part of the government’s broader security reform agenda.”
The Hashed “is an official Iraqi military institution operating under the authority of the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces,” Sudani said.
A 2016 law already affords the Hashed the status of a public body. But some factions face accusations of collecting government salaries for their fighters on the one hand, but acting entirely independently of the state on the other.
Some of the factions within the Hashed are aligned with Baghdad, while others pledge their allegiance first and foremost to the Tehran-led “Axis of Resistance.”
The latter have in the past launched rockets and explosive-laden drones at US troops stationed in Iraq as part of an anti-jihadist coalition.
Mansour said the Hashed was unlikely to morph into something that resembles Iran’s Guards.
It “isn’t a coherent institution,” he said.
“It has many different groups, many different factions, many different leaders, and they’re still fighting with each other.”
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a source close to the armed factions told AFP that Shiite Muslim political parties seek a “special law” that would guarantee the Hashed remains “an independent military institution, on the same level as the interior or defense ministry.”
Sunni Muslim and Kurdish politicians oppose any such move, and even among the Shiites there is no consensus, said the government official.
Deputy parliament speaker Mohsen Al-Mandalawi said the proposed legislation “contributes to enhancing the combat capabilities” of the Hashed and to “creating new formations concerned with developing this security institution,” according to the official Iraq News Agency.
If approved, it would pave the way for the creation of a special military academy and secure the Hashed’s “financial independence,” according to a parliament report published by state media.
According to the report, the Iraqi state council noted the “bloating” of administrative structures, and opposed the creation of such an academy for the Hashed instead of using existing defense ministry facilities.
But with legislative elections coming up in November, the former paramilitaries may seek to seize on the chance to gain institutional recognition.
The Hashed “needs something to reinvigorate its base,” said Mansour.
“The more the Hashed is institutionalized, the more access it has to Iraq’s wealthy state coffers,” he added.
“This could become another mechanism for patronage.”