Israel still fires on Lebanon almost a year after a ceasefire. Some predict the same for Gaza

Israel still fires on Lebanon almost a year after a ceasefire. Some predict the same for Gaza
Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike on the outskirts of the southern Lebanese village of Ej Jarmaq. (AFP)
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Israel still fires on Lebanon almost a year after a ceasefire. Some predict the same for Gaza

Israel still fires on Lebanon almost a year after a ceasefire. Some predict the same for Gaza
  • Lebanon’s health ministry has reported more than 270 people killed and around 850 wounded by Israeli military actions since the ceasefire
  • Israel says it aims to stop the badly weakened Hezbollah from rebuilding

BEIRUT: As a tenuous ceasefire took hold in Gaza this month, Israel launched more airstrikes on southern Lebanon — 11 months into a ceasefire there.
The bombardment of a construction equipment business killed a Syrian passerby, wounded seven people including two women, and destroyed millions of dollars worth of bulldozers and excavators.
The Oct. 11 strikes would be an anomaly in most countries not at war. But near-daily Israeli attacks have become the new normal in Lebanon, nearly a year after a US-brokered truce halted the latest conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.
Some see a likely blueprint for the Gaza ceasefire, with ongoing but lower-intensity conflicts. On Sunday, Israel struck Gaza after it said Hamas fired at its troops, in the first major test of the US-brokered truce.
Mona Yacoubian, director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank, described the Lebanon scenario as a “lessfire” rather than a ceasefire.
Lebanon “could well serve as the model for Gaza, essentially giving leeway to Israeli forces to strike whenever they deem a threat without a full resumption of conflict,” she said.
A ceasefire with no clear enforcement
The latest Israel-Hezbollah conflict began the day after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel triggered the war in Gaza. The militant group Hezbollah, largely based in southern Lebanon, began firing rockets into Israel in support of Hamas and the Palestinians.
Israel responded with airstrikes and shelling. The low-level conflict escalated into full-scale war in September 2024.
The ceasefire on Nov. 27, 2024, required Lebanon to stop armed groups from attacking Israel and Israel to halt “offensive” military actions in Lebanon. It said Israel and Lebanon can act in “self-defense,” without elaborating.
Both sides can report alleged violations to a monitoring committee of the US, France, Israel, Lebanon and the UN peacekeeping force known as UNIFIL, but the deal is vague on enforcement.
In practice, Israel has largely taken enforcement into its own hands, asserting that its strikes in Lebanon target Hezbollah militants, facilities and weapons.
Israel says it aims to stop the badly weakened group from rebuilding. Lebanese officials say the attacks obstruct its efforts to get Hezbollah to disarm by giving the group a pretext to hold onto its weapons.
Lebanon also says Israel’s strikes, including the Oct. 11 one, often harm civilians and destroy infrastructure unrelated to Hezbollah.
Lebanon’s health ministry has reported more than 270 people killed and around 850 wounded by Israeli military actions since the ceasefire. As of Oct. 9, the UN human rights office had verified that 107 of those killed were civilians or noncombatants, said spokesperson Thameen Al-Kheetan.
No Israelis have been killed by fire from Lebanon since the ceasefire.
From Nov. 27, 2024, to mid-October, UNIFIL detected around 950 projectiles fired from Israel into Lebanon and 100 Israeli airstrikes, spokesperson Kandice Ardiel said. During the same period, it reported 21 projectiles fired from Lebanon toward Israel. Hezbollah has claimed one attack since the ceasefire.
Conflicting narratives
After the Oct. 11 strikes in Msayleh, Israel’s army said it hit “engineering equipment intended for the reconstruction of terrorist infrastructure in southern Lebanon.”
Lebanese authorities, Hezbollah and the equipment’s owner disputed that.
“Everyone in Lebanon, from all different sects, comes to buy from us,” owner Ahmad Tabaja told journalists. “What have we done wrong?”
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called the strikes “blatant aggression against civilian facilities.” Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri accused Israel of seeking to prevent communities’ reconstruction. Lebanon complained to the UN Security Council.
A few days later, Israel struck a cement factory and a quarry, claiming Hezbollah planned to use it to rebuild its infrastructure.
Last month, an Israeli strike hit a motorcycle and a car carrying a family in Bint Jbeil. It killed Shadi Charara, a car salesman, three of his children — including 18-month-old twins — and the motorcyclist, and badly wounded Charara’s wife and oldest daughter. It was among the highest death tolls since the ceasefire, sparking particular outrage because of the children.
“My brother was a civilian and his children and wife are civilians, and they have nothing to do with politics,” said sister Amina Charara.
Israel’s military said it was targeting a Hezbollah militant, whom it did not name, but acknowledged that civilians were killed.
Even when the target is a known Hezbollah member, the military necessity can be disputed.
Earlier this month, an Israeli drone strike killed a Hezbollah member who was blinded last year in Israel’s exploding pagers attack, along with his wife. Israel’s army said Hassan Atwi was a key official in Hezbollah’s Aerial Defense Unit. Hezbollah officials said he had played no military role since losing his eyesight.
The end of ‘mutual deterrence’
Hezbollah was formed in 1982, with Iranian backing, to fight Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon at the time. Israeli forces withdrew in 2000, and Hezbollah grew into one of the region’s most powerful non-state armed groups.
In 2006, Hezbollah and Israel fought a month-long war that ended in a draw. For the next 17 years, “there was a tense calm ... that was largely due to mutual deterrence,” said Nicholas Blanford, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Middle East program.
Strikes in Lebanon were generally understood to be off limits. Both sides wanted to avoid another damaging war. Now that equation has changed.
Though Blanford said Hezbollah could still deliver blows to Israel, the group’s “deterrence has been shattered by the recent war,” he said.
In an interview with The Associated Press last month, Hezbollah political official Mohammad Fneish said the prospect of coexisting with daily Israeli attacks is “not acceptable.”
But the group has largely limited itself to calling on Lebanon’s government to pressure Israel with what Fneish called “its political, diplomatic or other capabilities.”
He added: “If things develop further, then the resistance leadership is studying matters, and all options are open.”
Yacoubian, the analyst, said she didn’t see the situation in Lebanon changing any time soon, “barring a breakthrough in behind-the-scenes negotiations brokered by the US”
With the Gaza ceasefire, she said, the difference could be the “significant role” of fellow mediators Qatar, Egypt and Turkiye.


Israel says remains of another hostage returned from Gaza identified

Israel says remains of another hostage returned from Gaza identified
Updated 20 sec ago

Israel says remains of another hostage returned from Gaza identified

Israel says remains of another hostage returned from Gaza identified
  • Tal Chaimi, commander of the Nir Yitzhak kibbutz defense militia, was killed on the first day of the war
JERUSALEM: Israel said Tuesday that remains of a hostage held in Gaza, returned by Hamas a day earlier, had been identified as those of Tal Chaimi, a non-commissioned officer killed on Oct. 7, 2023.
“Following the completion of the identification process... representatives of (the army) informed the family of the hostage, Sergeant Major Tal Chaimi, of blessed memory, that their loved one had been returned to Israel and his identification had been completed,” the Israeli prime minister’s office said.
Tal Chaimi, 41, commander of the Nir Yitzhak kibbutz defense militia, was killed on the first day of the war triggered by Hamas’s attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. His body was taken to Gaza.

In Sudan’s war, grassroots network steps in where authorities fail

In Sudan’s war, grassroots network steps in where authorities fail
Updated 21 October 2025

In Sudan’s war, grassroots network steps in where authorities fail

In Sudan’s war, grassroots network steps in where authorities fail
  • Known as Emergency Response Rooms (ERR), the group tirelessly distributes food, rebuilds homes and organizes evacuations in the country ravaged by more than two years of war that has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions

PORT SUDAN: In Sudan, volunteers risk death and arrest daily to serve a starving and uprooted population, vital work that made their network one of the top contenders for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize.
Known as Emergency Response Rooms (ERR), the group tirelessly distributes food, rebuilds homes and organizes evacuations in the country ravaged by more than two years of war that has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions.
“We are part of the population, we come from wherever we operate,” said Dia Al-Deen Al-Malek, a volunteer coordinator with the emergency response unit in the capital Khartoum.
“We are doctors, engineers, students, unemployed people, accountants.”
The network is located in all regions of the country and brings together thousands of volunteers, mostly young people.
The teams operate outside of administrative constraints, often acting as relays for international agencies which, unable to deploy their teams on site, entrust them with the management of food and medical supplies.
“They are determined and brave people and organizations who know the context, know the language and understand what’s needed,” Denise Brown, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Sudan, told AFP.

- ‘Beating heart’ -

“Since day one of the war, the Emergency Response Rooms and countless local responders have been the beating heart of the humanitarian response in Sudan,” said Shashwat Saraf, country director for the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), one of the NGOs working with the grassroots network.
Their work is to respond to emergencies, from managing hospitals to repairing water and electricity networks, running canteens, caring for the wounded, supporting victims of sexual violence and rebuilding schools.
“When the war started, there were corpses in the streets and a complete lack of action,” Malek said.
Volunteers were thrust onto the front lines to support the crumbling government when, in April 2023, the country descended into a power struggle between army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
The ERR evolved from Sudan’s resistance committees, local networks that emerged during protests against former president Omar Al-Bashir and played a key role in the 2018-2019 revolution.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, they led prevention campaigns and vaccination efforts.
“Before joining the emergency room, many of us were already working in humanitarian projects,” said Al-Sadiq Issa, an ERR volunteer since May 2024 in Dilling, a besieged town in South Kordofan.
Issa handles documentation and monitoring activities, working with 36 volunteers divided into specialized offices: logistics, external relations, training, women’s protection and security.
“They are the only ones who can help us,” Emgahed Moussa, a 22-year-old resident of Dilling, told AFP.
“It’s thanks to them that we eat. They bring us flour, pills, sometimes just a kind word.”
According to the United Nations, more than four million people benefited from ERR’s work during the first 10 months of the conflict.
In the agricultural state of Al-Jazirah, southeast of Khartoum, where more than a million displaced people have returned since the army regained control, the ERR has mobilized safe spaces for women and children.
There too, they provide “essential medicines, first aid, as well as psychological and social support to victims of violence,” said Wafa Hassan, spokesperson for the regional emergency unit.

- ‘Biggest risk’ is arrest -

Present on the ground in the most inaccessible areas, the volunteers also document abuses by the army and paramilitaries against civilians.
Their reports are considered valuable sources in a country plagued by propaganda and disinformation.
In a general climate of fear and abuse regularly denounced by the UN, the volunteers, treated with suspicion by both sides, have been killed, raped, assaulted and arrested.
“The biggest risk in our work is being arrested, because emergency rooms are seen as an extension of the revolution,” Malek said.
Nader Mahmoud, a 25-year-old volunteer from Blue Nile state in southeastern Sudan, was arrested in early October, according to his colleagues, who have had no news since.
Moussa’s brother, a volunteer in Dilling, “was arrested while transporting diapers.”
“When he returned, he continued anyway,” the young woman said.
In September, the work of the ERR was recognized with the Rafto Prize for human rights.


Mediators step up diplomacy after major flareup in Gaza

Mediators step up diplomacy after major flareup in Gaza
Updated 21 October 2025

Mediators step up diplomacy after major flareup in Gaza

Mediators step up diplomacy after major flareup in Gaza
  • Hamas meets with truce mediators in Cairo
  • UN says ‘concerned by all acts of violence’

 JERUSALEM: Two of the United States’ top envoys to the Middle East met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday after weekend violence threatened to wreck a fragile US-brokered ceasefire in Gaza.

The sit-down came as Israel reopened the Kerem Shalom border crossing into Gaza for aid shipments, a security official and a humanitarian source said, after the entry point was closed briefly on Sunday following the killing of two Israeli soldiers.
In response, Israel carried out dozens of strikes targeting Hamas across Gaza — using 153 tonnes of bombs, according to Netanyahu.
US President Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and adviser son-in-law Jared Kushner met Netanyahu on Monday to discuss “developments and updates in the region,” said Shosh Bedrosian, spokeswoman for the prime minister’s office.
Bedrosian added that US Vice President JD Vance and his wife were also due to visit Israel “for a few days and will be meeting with the prime minister.”
Netanyahu later told the Israeli parliament that Vance was due to arrive on Tuesday for discussions on “two things ... the security challenges we face and the diplomatic opportunities before us.”
Vance has already urged Gulf countries to establish a “security infrastructure” to ensure that Hamas disarmed.
A Hamas delegation was in Cairo on Monday for talks with Qatari and Egyptian mediators on the continuation of the truce.
Gaza’s civil defense agency said four people were killed by Israeli forces on Monday in Gaza City.
The people were killed in two separate incidents on Monday morning, both times “by Israeli gunfire as they were returning to check on their homes in the Al-Shaaf area, east of Al-Tuffah neighborhood, in the east of Gaza City,” said Mahmud Bassal, spokesman for the rescue service.
The UN was “concerned by all acts of violence in Gaza,” spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said.
“We urge all parties to honor all of their commitments to ensure the protection of civilians and avoid any actions that could lead to a renewal of hostilities and undermine humanitarian operations,” the UN secretary-general’s spokesman said.
The EU is leaving the door open to sanctioning Israel to maintain leverage to ensure the Gaza ceasefire deal is fully implemented, the bloc’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said.


Syria announces seizure of 12 million captagon pills

Syria announces seizure of 12 million captagon pills
Updated 21 October 2025

Syria announces seizure of 12 million captagon pills

Syria announces seizure of 12 million captagon pills
  • The seizure marks one of the largest drug busts since the transitional authority assumed power in late 2024

DAMASCUS: The Syrian interior ministry said Monday it seized about 12 million captagon stimulant pills in a raid on a drug smuggling network operating near Damascus.
The seizure marks one of the largest drug busts since the transitional authority assumed power in late 2024.
Following “precise monitoring and tracking of a smuggling network attempting to traffic large quantities of narcotics abroad,” security forces seized “around 12 million captagon pills in the Al-Dumayr area,” Brig. Gen. Khaled Eid, director of the Anti-Narcotics Department, said in a ministry statement.
The leader of the network was arrested during the operation, according to Eid.
The confiscated drugs will be destroyed.
The operation reflects the department’s “determined approach to combating smuggling, cutting off its sources, and prosecuting” those involved in drug trafficking.
Captagon, which is similar to an amphetamine, became Syria’s largest export during the civil war that erupted in 2011, with its trade serving as a key funding source for the government of ousted president Bashar Assad.
Since Assad’s fall, the new authorities have reported numerous major seizures of agon across the country. However, neighboring countries continue to report the interception of large shipments.


Houthis release 5 Yemeni UN staffers in Sanaa after weekend detention at offices

Houthis release 5 Yemeni UN staffers in Sanaa after weekend detention at offices
Updated 20 October 2025

Houthis release 5 Yemeni UN staffers in Sanaa after weekend detention at offices

Houthis release 5 Yemeni UN staffers in Sanaa after weekend detention at offices
  • The Houthis have a long-running crackdown against the UN and others working in Yemen’s rebel-held areas, including capital Sanaa, the coastal city of Hodeida and rebel stronghold in the northern province Sadaa
  • One mourner, Ayham Hassan, said “Israel is the biggest enemy for Arabs and Muslims”

ADEN, Yemen: Houthi rebels released five Yemeni United Nations staff members and allowed 15 international ones to move freely within the UN compound after detaining them there in Sanaa over the weekend, a UN spokesperson said Monday.
Stéphane Dujarric, the UN spokesperson, also said Houthi security forces had left the compound after the latest of such raids on international organizations.
The Houthis have a long-running crackdown against the UN and others working in Yemen’s rebel-held areas, including capital Sanaa, the coastal city of Hodeida and rebel stronghold in the northern province Sadaa.
The rebels have repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that the detained UN staff and employees of other organizations and embassies were spies, which the UN has denied.
Dozens of people have been detained. A World Food Program worker died in detention earlier this year in Sadaa.
Dujarric also told reporters Monday that Secretary-General António Guterres spoke with the foreign ministers and leaders of Iran, Yemen and earlier in the day regarding the detainment of staff.
He said that as the UN engages in the sensitive negotiations with the Houthis, it is important for member states who have influence in the region, like those three countries, to use their leverage to assist in the release of international and national staff.
Funeral for military chief
Earlier Monday, the Iran-backed rebels held a funeral for their military chief of staff who was killed in a recent Israeli strike, with more than 1,000 people gathered in Sanaa.
The Houthis acknowledged last week that Maj. Gen. Muhammad Abdul Karim Al-Ghamari was killed in an Israeli airstrike along with other rebel leaders. The Houthis did not say when the strike took place. The death further escalated tensions between the rebels and Israel.
Nearly two months ago, Israeli airstrikes killed senior Houthi government officials in Sanaa, including their prime minister, Ahmed Al-Rahawi.
The Houthis said Al-Ghamari was killed along with his 13-year-old son, Hussain, and “several of his companions,” according to the rebel-controlled SABA news agency, which didn’t provide further details.
Many in the funeral crowd on Monday vented their anger at Israel.
One mourner, Ayham Hassan, said “Israel is the biggest enemy for Arabs and Muslims.” He spoke to The Associated Press by phone from Sanaa.
The UN sanctioned Al-Ghamari for his “leading role in orchestrating the Houthis’ military efforts that are directly threatening the peace, security and stability of Yemen, as well as cross-border attacks against .”
The US Treasury sanctioned him in 2021 for his responsibility in “orchestrating attacks by Houthi forces impacting Yemeni civilians” and said he had been trained by Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group and Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard.
The US and Israel had launched an air and naval campaign against the Houthis in response to the rebels’ missile and drone attacks on Israel and on ships in the Red Sea. The Houthis have said they are acting in solidarity with the Palestinians over the war in Gaza.
Their attacks over the past two years have upended shipping in the Red Sea, through which about $1 trillion of goods pass each year.