Wednesday, April 1, 2026
spot_imgspot_img

Top 5 This Week

spot_img

Related Posts

Israeli strikes kill seven in Beirut as it vows to occupy southern Lebanon after war ends

Published on
01/04/2026 – 6:13 GMT+2

Heavy strikes hit Lebanon’s capital Beirut overnight as Israel claimed it had struck a “senior Hezbollah commander” and another member of the group. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said his country’s military intends to occupy a swathe of southern Lebanon.

At least seven people were killed in two separate strikes on Lebanon’s capital Beirut early on Wednesday, the Lebanese health ministry said.


ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT

The health ministry said an Israeli air raid on south Beirut’s Jnah area killed at least five people and wounded 21 others. A Lebanese security source said four parked cars were hit.

Another strike that hit a vehicle in Khaldeh, just south of the capital, killed two people and wounded three, the health ministry said in a separate statement.

Israel’s military said it had struck a “senior Hezbollah commander” and another member of the group in two separate strikes “in the Beirut area”, without naming the targets or giving detail on the exact locations.

More Israeli strikes also hit southern Lebanon, where fierce clashes with Hezbollah fighters continue, and the militant group claimed rocket fire targeted a group of soldiers near the border.

In the South, strikes killed at least eight people, one of them a paramedic, and wounded more than 30, according to the ministry of health.

Israeli media said a barrage of more than 40 rockets were fired by Hezbollah, which claimed multiple attacks on northern Israel in successive statements late Tuesday.

Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war on March 2 when Tehran-backed militant group Hezbollah launched attacks on Israel to avenge the killing of Iran’s leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Israel vows to occupy South

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said his country intends to occupy large parts of southern Lebanon in the strongest language yet from Israel since invading its northern neighbour.

Katz said that “at the end of the operation, the IDF (military) will establish itself in a security zone inside Lebanon… and will maintain security control over the entire area up to the Litani” River, which flows around 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the border.

He also said the return of hundreds of thousands of displaced Lebanese would be “completely prevented” until northern Israel’s security was ensured.

“All the houses in the villages adjacent to the border in Lebanon will be demolished… to remove once and for all the border-adjacent threats from the residents of the north,” he added.

Lebanese Defence Minister Michel Menassa quickly condemned the comments, saying the plans were “a deepening of the aggression” against his country.

Menassa said Katz’s remarks were “no longer mere threats, but reflect a clear intention to impose a new occupation of Lebanese territory, forcibly displace hundreds of thousands of citizens, and systematically destroy villages and towns in the South.”

Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney denounced Israel’s deployment of troops against Hezbollah targets in Lebanon as an “illegal invasion” that violates its “integrity and sovereignty”.

Lebanese authorities say the war has so far killed more than 1,200 people and displaced more than one million.

Israel blames Hezbollah for deaths of UN peacekeepers

UN Ambassador Danny Danon said Israel blames Hezbollah for all three of the recent peacekeeper deaths in southern Lebanon, citing explosive devices Monday near Bani Ayan and the shelling of a UN peacekeeper position Saturday.

He provided no evidence, and a UN spokesman said the investigation is ongoing. The three Indonesian peacekeepers were killed as Israel and Hezbollah have been engaged in fighting.

Late on Tuesday, Israel’s military said its troops were not present in the southern Lebanon area where an explosion killed two UNIFIL peacekeepers on Monday. It also said no explosive device had been placed in the area by Israeli soldiers.

A UN security source told AFP on Tuesday that Israeli fire had killed an Indonesian peacekeeper at the weekend, after the UN force said it was investigating the incident.

The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon had said that the peacekeeper was killed on Sunday evening when a projectile of unknown origin “exploded in a UNIFIL position near Adchit al Qusayr”.

The source told AFP on condition of anonymity that investigations had shown the fire came from an Israeli tank, adding that “debris from a tank round has been recovered” at the site.

On Monday, UNIFIL said another “explosion of unknown origin” destroyed a peacekeeping vehicle, killing two more Indonesian troops, and that an investigation had also been launched into that incident.

The UN security source said the origin of that explosion may have been a mine.

Go to accessibility shortcuts

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles