UNIFIL calls on Israel to halt airstrikes and ‘all violations’ in south Lebanon

UNIFIL calls on Israel to halt airstrikes and ‘all violations’ in south Lebanon
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This photo taken on November 6, 2025 shows burnt construction equipment at a site targeted by an Israeli strike in Al-Msayleh area in southern Lebanon on October 11, 2025. (AFP)
UNIFIL calls on Israel to halt airstrikes and ‘all violations’ in south Lebanon
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Israeli soldiers ride in the army Merkava main battle tank at a position in northern Israel along the border with southern Lebanon on November 6, 2025. (AFP)
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UNIFIL calls on Israel to halt airstrikes and ‘all violations’ in south Lebanon

UNIFIL calls on Israel to halt airstrikes and ‘all violations’ in south Lebanon
  • Military action ‘undermines progress toward political, diplomatic solution,’ peacekeeping force warns
  • 1 dead, 8 wounded in multiple attacks despite standing ceasefire agreement

NEW YORK: The UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon on Thursday urged Israel to immediately halt airstrikes in southern Lebanon and called on all sides to show restraint to prevent a wider escalation.eeeed

The peacekeeping mission said its troops observed multiple Israeli airstrikes in the southern towns of Tayr Dibbah, Taibe and Ayta Al-Jabal — areas within UNIFIL’s zone of operations.

One person was killed and eight others were wounded in the heavy strikes.

Israel said the airstrikes targeted Hezbollah sites and capabilities, marking an escalation in near-daily attacks despite a standing ceasefire agreement.

“These airstrikes constitute clear violations of Security Council resolution 1701,” UNIFIL said, referring to the 2006 resolution that ended the war between Israel and Hezbollah.

The interim force called on Israel to “immediately cease these attacks and all violations” of UN Security Council resolution 1701, while urging Lebanese actors “to refrain from any response that could inflame the situation further.”

It said both countries must adhere to their obligations under the resolution and to a recent understanding reached in November “to avoid putting the current hard-won progress at risk.”

In November 2024, Israel and Lebanon agreed a US and French-brokered ceasefire that ended over a year of conflict.

The agreement, which took effect on Nov. 27, 2024, was a 60-day truce intended to be the foundation for a permanent cessation of hostilities based on the full implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 170.

UNIFIL said the overnight strikes came as the Lebanese Armed Forces carried out operations to control unauthorized weapons and infrastructure south of the Litani River.

“Any military action, especially on such a destructive scale, threatens the safety of civilians and undermines progress toward a political and diplomatic solution,” it said.

UNIFIL added that its peacekeepers remain deployed alongside Lebanese soldiers “working to restore stability in south Lebanon,” and continue to support both Lebanon and Israel in implementing the resolution.


Mediators propose deal to get Hamas fighters out of Gaza’s Israeli zone, sources say

Updated 9 sec ago

Mediators propose deal to get Hamas fighters out of Gaza’s Israeli zone, sources say

Mediators propose deal to get Hamas fighters out of Gaza’s Israeli zone, sources say
Hamas fighters holed up in the Israeli-held Rafah area of Gaza would surrender their arms in exchange for passage to other areas of the enclave under a proposal to resolve an issue seen as a risk to the month-old truce, according to two sources familiar with the talks. (Reuters/File)




Witkoff said the proposed deal for some 200 fighters would be a test for a broader process to disarm Hamas forces across Gaza
Egyptian mediators have proposed that, in exchange for safe passage, fighters still in Rafah surrender their arms to Egypt and give details of tunnels there so they can be destroyed

CAIRO: Hamas fighters holed up in the Israeli-held Rafah area of Gaza would surrender their arms in exchange for passage to other areas of the enclave under a proposal to resolve an issue seen as a risk to the month-old truce, according to two sources familiar with the talks.
US special envoy Steve Witkoff said the proposed deal for some 200 fighters would be a test for a broader process to disarm Hamas forces across Gaza.
Since the US-brokered ceasefire took effect in Gaza on October 10, the Rafah area has been the scene of at least two attacks on Israeli forces which Israel has blamed on Hamas; the militant group has denied responsibility.
Egyptian mediators have proposed that, in exchange for safe passage, fighters still in Rafah surrender their arms to Egypt and give details of tunnels there so they can be destroyed, one of the sources, an Egyptian security official, said.
Israel and Hamas have yet to publicly accept mediators’ proposals, the two sources said. A third confirmed that talks on the issue were underway.
The Israeli Prime Minister’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the accounts; Hazem Qassem, a Hamas spokesperson in Gaza, declined to comment.
The attacks in Rafah spiralled into some of the worst violence since the ceasefire took hold, with three Israeli soldiers killed, prompting Israeli retaliation that killed dozens of Palestinians.
Two of the sources said the Hamas fighters in Rafah, which the group’s armed wing has said have been out of contact since March, might be unaware a ceasefire was in place. One of them added that getting the fighters out served the interest of safeguarding the truce.
The sources did not say how many Hamas fighters might be holed up in the Rafah area.
The ceasefire is the first part of US President Donald Trump’s plan to end the Gaza war.
The militant group has released the last 20 living hostages seized in the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners; Israeli troops have withdrawn from western areas of Gaza, where Hamas remains in control.
Details of the next phase of Trump’s plan, which requires Hamas to disarm and surrender control of Gaza, have yet to be agreed. The plan foresees Gaza being governed by a technocratic Palestinian committee with international supervision, and the deployment of an international force.
Witkoff, one of the US negotiators on the plan, said work to stand up an international security force would be finished in the next three weeks and that would be the moment for Hamas to decommission its fighters and demilitarize the strip.
“We may see the model of what we’re trying to do (across Gaza)... with these 200 fighters who are trapped in Rafah, and whether they’re going to be able to raise their hands, walk out, turn over their weapons,” Witkoff said at a business conference in Florida. “And so this will be one of the tests.”
Since the ceasefire, Hamas has also handed over the bodies of 22 of 28 deceased hostages. Hamas has said the devastation in Gaza has made locating the bodies difficult. Israel accuses Hamas of stalling.
Israel has released to Gaza the bodies of 285 Palestinians, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Hamas-led militants seized 251 hostages in the October 7 attacks, and killed another 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed nearly 69,000 Palestinians, health officials in the enclave say — 241 of them killed since the ceasefire took hold.