ֱ

With strong ties to Lebanon, Latin Americans suffer in the wake of Israeli attacks

Brazilians deplane after the Air Force evacuated them from Lebanon amid Israeli airstrikes, at the Air Force base in Guarulhos, greater Sao Paulo area, Brazil, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024. (AP)
Brazilians deplane after the Air Force evacuated them from Lebanon amid Israeli airstrikes, at the Air Force base in Guarulhos, greater Sao Paulo area, Brazil, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 06 October 2024

With strong ties to Lebanon, Latin Americans suffer in the wake of Israeli attacks

Brazilians deplane after the Air Force evacuated them from Lebanon amid Israeli airstrikes, at the Air Force base in Guarulhos.
  • Brazil’s government estimates 21,000 Brazilian nationals living in Lebanon

BRASILIA: With millions of people of Lebanese descent living in Latin America — certain analysts think there are more people of Lebanese ancestry in Brazil alone than in Lebanon itself — the number of Latin Americans in Lebanon is equally high.

Since the Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon and on Beirut intensified, countries like Colombia and Brazil have sent planes to rescue groups of their citizens.

A massive evacuation from cities near the border with Israel has been ordered by the invading forces over the past few days. At least 70 towns have been included in the evacuation list by Israel. The strikes on Beirut led hundreds of thousands of people to move as well.

In many such locations, there are groups of Latin American families, many the sons and daughters of Lebanese immigrants to the New World who decided to go back to their parents’ homeland.

Cases of Latin American women, with or without Lebanese ancestry, who married Lebanese men in Latin America and decided to move with them to Lebanon are also pretty common.

That is the case with Leni Souza, a 48-year-old Brazilian woman from Parana state, which has one of the largest Lebanese communities in Brazil.

Souza spent her childhood in Foz do Iguacu, on the border with Ciudad del Este in Paraguay, and Puerto Iguazu, in Argentina, an area with hundreds of thousands of Lebanese nationals. She met her husband, a Lebanese-born man with dual (Lebanese and Brazilian) citizenship, in the city. Some 11 years ago, already with three daughters, the couple decided to move to a city in the south of Lebanon. The eldest is 20 and a university student; the other two are 13-year-old twins.

“Our region has been hardly hit. We finally managed to escape on Oct. 1, after a long time trying to put fuel in our cars. We spent nine hours stuck on the road. Everybody was trying to run away,” she told Arab News.

Souza said her daughters are traumatized by the sound of the bombs. The night before they escaped, there was a terrible strike on the area. They spent the night at their grandparents’ house, thinking it would be safer. Souza, who was also there, said it was a nightmare.

She added: “The bomb’s noise was so loud that we thought they were exploding the house. We had to touch ourselves to confirm we were alive.”

Her eldest daughter lost a college colleague that night. The building where she lived was destroyed and the young lady died.

The family left the city without a definite destination. Shelters were all full of displaced people. They eventually found a second-floor free space to rent, in a mountainous region. It has no furniture or any home appliances, but they feel better now that they have a place to stay.

Brazil’s government estimates at 21,000 the number of Brazilian nationals living in Lebanon. After sending questionnaires to the whole community, the Brazilian Embassy in Beirut learned that about 3,000 of them wished to be evacuated to the South American country.

Souza said: “I confirmed that we want to be taken to Sao Paulo. But it will not be easy for us. Our whole life is in Beirut. We’ll begin our lives from scratch in Brazil.”

The region’s Brazilian women keep a group on social media and stand by each other in difficult situations. Souza said many people are facing serious health problems now and need to be immediately taken from Lebanon.

She said: “I would be happy to give my place to those people, if my name appears on the next list. I feel safer now on the mountains and don’t care if we have to wait a little longer in order to go to Brazil.”

Brazil’s first plane had to wait longer than had been planned in Portugal due to security reasons, but it finally landed in Beirut on Oct. 5, rescuing 229 Brazilians and three pets. Operation Cedar Roots, as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s administration called it, may take several weeks until it is finally concluded.

Up until now, two Brazilians have died as a result of Israeli aggression, 15-year-old Kamal Abdallah and 16-year-old Mirna Raef Nasser.

Another significant Latin American community in Lebanon is the one formed by Argentines. There are no reliable estimates of their number and President Javier Milei’s administration still has not announced an evacuation plan.

“I called the Argentine Embassy and I was told that the government is not taking anyone out of Lebanon,” an Argentine woman, who preferred to remain anonymous due to safety concerns, told Arab News. The embassy directed her to leave Lebanon through Syria.

On Oct. 5, however, Said Chaya, the secretary-general of the Lebanese-Argentine Culture Union, known as the UCAL, told Arab News that the government had begun to ask Lebanon’s residents if they wanted to be rescued and taken to Argentina.

Chaya told Arab News: “People who can’t leave endangered areas are being consulted. But, as far as I know, most of them don’t want to escape from Lebanon. They prefer to remain there on the mountains and wait to see what will happen.”

The Argentine woman who talked to Arab News has been feeling those contradictory sentiments. On the one hand, she has thought about fleeing the region after the strikes on Beirut, where she lives, had led her and her family to leave the capital, but, on the other, she said her husband’s extended family cannot be left behind.

“We can’t flee the country and leave them here. Either we all go or no one goes,” she said, adding they are a group of 20 people who are all together now in a small house with only one bathroom.

An Argentine woman with no Arab ancestry, she has been living in Lebanon since 2003 and has three children: two of them, aged 20 and 25, are with her now.

She said: “We came in order to live a safer life with our kids, for their education, for religion. Except for the 2006 attacks, it used to be a safe country.”

Her two children now get extremely anxious when they hear the sound of bombs exploding.

She added: “Israel wants to create a second Gaza here. I’m terribly sad, because most of the world pretends that nothing is happening. They don’t care about us.”

She said that her family is tired and that she fears for her relatives’ safety.

She said: “The truth is that I don’t want to go anywhere else. I just want this to end tomorrow and to go back to my house.”

Lebanese families in Latin America follow the events in the Middle East and their country’s rescue plans with anguish. Lawyer Hanna Mtaneos Hanna Jr., an honorary consul of Lebanon in Goiania, Brazil, told Arab News the atmosphere among Lebanese Brazilians is tense.

“The Lebanese community is saddened and disgusted with the situation. Things have been escalating and the world keeps watching without doing anything,” he told Arab News.

Hanna Jr. himself has relatives in the northern part of Lebanon. Despite the fact that his four cousins are relatively safe now, he has been worried like everybody else.

He said: “A friend of mine has two sons living in Beirut. He has been extremely concerned. They’ve been trying to come back, but all commercial flights are constantly canceled.”

He thinks that the Brazilian government has been acting with the necessary haste since the crisis began, despite the difficulties involved in an operation during war.

That is not the case with Argentina, where Milei’s own particular views concerning Israel — he is very interested in Judaism and even promised, during the campaign, that he would move the Argentine Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem — have reportedly been affecting his work with the Lebanese community.

Chaya said: “He keeps, for instance, a distant relationship with Muslims, who are part of the Lebanese community. Maybe that’s why it took so long for the government to organize the rescue.”

The UCAL and dozens of other Lebanese organizations published a letter last week in which they repudiated Israeli aggression. Protests against the attacks have been promoted in cities like Rosario and Cordoba.

The Islamic Center of the Argentine Republic, known as CIRA and founded mainly by Lebanese and Syrian immigrants decades ago, has been directly impacted by the attacks, said Hassan El-Bacha, its secretary-general.

“Israel is destroying the cities from which our ancestors came,” he told Arab News.

He said the community is appalled by the strikes, adding: “The Zionist occupation will not be detained unless the international community takes the matters in its hands.”

Other countries in Latin America are also involved in the crisis. A flight carrying 116 Colombian nationals and a few foreigners arrived in Bogota last week. New flights have already been scheduled and Peru’s government has also been helping a group of Peruvian nationals sheltering in the north.


Gaza civil defense says 52 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 52 killed in Israeli strikes
Updated 4 sec ago

Gaza civil defense says 52 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 52 killed in Israeli strikes
NUSEIRAT: Israeli strikes killed at least 52 people across Gaza on Thursday, the territory’s civil defense agency and hospitals said, including an employee of the French charity Doctors Without Borders.
The civil defense agency, a rescue force which operates under Hamas authority, said the deaths were caused “by continuous Israeli bombardments on the Gaza Strip since dawn,” specifying that 10 people, including at least one child, were killed in Gaza City.
Several hospitals confirmed to AFP that they had received 10 bodies in Gaza City, 14 in central Gaza, and 28 in the territory’s south.
They reported that some were killed in air strikes, others by drone fire and shootings.
Asked for comment, the Israeli army said it was looking into the matter.
The Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis reported nearly 30 deaths, including 14 killed by “Israeli gunfire” targeting Palestinians waiting for food distribution in the Al-Tina and Morag areas.
The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir el-Balah said it had received nine bodies after several strikes on nearby areas.
An AFP photographer saw several corpses, some wrapped in white shrouds, in the hospital morgue as relatives mourned nearby.
Among the dead was 42-year-old Omar Al-Hayek, a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) staff member.
He was killed in a strike on a group of civilians in central Deir Al-Balah, according to the hospital and his family.
“We received word that some of our staff had been injured and taken to Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital,” said Karin Huster, head of the MSF medical team in Gaza.
“When we arrived, we discovered that one of our colleagues had been killed, and four others wounded,” she told AFP.
“The consequences will be tragic for their families and for our team. Enough killings — whether targeted or not, this is unacceptable.”
The nearly two-year war in Gaza broke out after Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
The attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory military campaign since then has killed 66,225 Palestinians in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run health ministry, which the United Nations considers reliable.

Egypt working to convince Hamas to accept Trump plan, says foreign minister

Displaced Palestinians gather to collect water from a truck at a makeshift camp in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip.
Displaced Palestinians gather to collect water from a truck at a makeshift camp in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip.
Updated 52 min 15 sec ago

Egypt working to convince Hamas to accept Trump plan, says foreign minister

Displaced Palestinians gather to collect water from a truck at a makeshift camp in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip.
  • Abdelatty said it was clear that Hamas had to disarm and that Israel should not be given an excuse to carry on with its offensive in Gaza
  • “It is beyond revenge. This is ethnic cleansing and genocide in motion. So enough is enough,” Abdelatty said

PARIS: Egypt’s foreign minister said on Thursday that Cairo was working with Qatar and Turkiye to convince Hamas to accept US President Donald Trump’s plan to end a nearly two-year-old war in Gaza, and warned the conflict would escalate if the militant group refused.
Speaking at the French Institute of International Relations in Paris, Badr Abdelatty said it was clear that Hamas had to disarm and that Israel should not be given an excuse to carry on with its offensive in Gaza.
“Let’s not give any excuse for one party to use Hamas as a pretext for this mad daily killings of civilians. What’s happening is far beyond the seventh of October,” he said, referring to the group’s 2023 attack on Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed and more than 200 people taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel’s offensive has killed over 66,000 people in Gaza, Palestinian health authorities say.
“It is beyond revenge. This is ethnic cleansing and genocide in motion. So enough is enough,” Abdelatty said.
The White House unveiled earlier this week a 20-point document that called for an immediate ceasefire, an exchange of hostages held by Hamas for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, a staged Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, Hamas disarmament and a transitional government led by an international body.
On Tuesday, Trump gave Hamas three to four days to agree to the plan.
Egypt is a key mediator in efforts to end the Gaza war and Abdelatty said Cairo was coordinating with Qatar and Turkiye to convince Hamas to respond positively to the plan, but he remained very cautious.
“If Hamas refuse, you know, then it would be very difficult. And of course, we will have more escalation. So that’s why we are exerting our intensive efforts in order to make this plan applicable and to get the approval of Hamas,” he said. Abdelatty said while he was broadly supportive of Trump’s proposal for Gaza, more talks were needed on it.
“There are a lot of holes that need to be filled, we need more discussions on how to implement it, especially on two important issues — governance and security arrangements,” he said. “We are supportive of the Trump plan and the vision to end war and need to move forward.”
When asked whether he feared the Trump plan could lead to forced displacement of Palestinians, he said Egypt would not accept that.
“Displacement will not happen, it will not happen because displacement means the end of the Palestinian cause,” he said. “We will not allow this to happen under any circumstances.”


Jordan holds Israel responsible for safety of its citizens detained aboard Gaza aid flotilla

Jordan holds Israel responsible for safety of its citizens detained aboard Gaza aid flotilla
Updated 02 October 2025

Jordan holds Israel responsible for safety of its citizens detained aboard Gaza aid flotilla

Jordan holds Israel responsible for safety of its citizens detained aboard Gaza aid flotilla
  • Ministry of Foreign and Expatriate Affairs cautions against exposing any Jordanians traveling with the Global Sumud Flotilla to harm
  • Israeli forces detained dozens of activists after intercepting the vessels overnight on Wednesday, including citizens of Kuwait, France, Malaysia and Sweden

LONDON: Jordan said on Thursday it holds Israel responsible for the safety of Jordanian citizens traveling with the Global Sumud Flotilla who were detained overnight when the Israeli navy intercepted the humanitarian mission to Gaza before it reached the Palestinian territory.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriate Affairs cautioned against any action that might expose Jordanians to harm.

The Israeli navy intercepted about 39 boats that were part of the flotilla 70 nautical miles from Gaza. They were carrying food and other aid supplies in an attempt to break a long-standing Israeli blockade on the Palestinian coastal territory. Dozens of activists on board the vessels were detained, including citizens of Kuwait, France, Malaysia and Sweden.

Fuad Majali, a spokesperson for Jordan’s Foreign Ministry, said it was “ready to assist in the evacuation of citizens from friendly countries upon request.” The ministry is in direct contact with Jordanian citizens detained in Israel to “ensure their safety, uphold their rights and facilitate their return to Jordan,” he added.

Jordan described the interception of the flotilla in international waters by Israeli forces on Wednesday night as “a blatant violation of international law, a threat to freedom of navigation and a serious danger to civilians’ lives.”

Majali called for all restrictions on the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza to be lifted, so that the severe humanitarian crisis caused by the Israeli aggression in the territory can be addressed, The Jordan News Agency reported.


Hamas military leader rejects US peace deal: BBC

Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Updated 02 October 2025

Hamas military leader rejects US peace deal: BBC

Smoke rises during an Israeli military operation in Gaza City, as seen from the central Gaza Strip, October 2, 2025. (Reuters)
  • Izz Al-Din Al-Haddad reportedly believes plan is attempt to destroy group
  • Netanyahu: Israel will ‘forcibly resist’ creation of Palestinian state

LONDON: The leader of the military wing of Hamas in Gaza has rejected a US peace proposal, the BBC reported on Thursday.

Izz Al-Din Al-Haddad has reportedly indicated that the group will continue to fight as he believes the proposal, backed by Israel, is designed to destroy Hamas.

Reports earlier this week suggested that senior Hamas members in Qatar were open to negotiating aspects of the 20-point plan, which includes the group’s disarmament and surrender of any future role in governing Gaza.

However, its military wing holds greater sway over proceedings given that it holds the 48 hostages remaining in Gaza, only 20 of whom are thought to be alive.

One major stumbling block is the requirement for all hostages to be released within 72 hours of the ceasefire, which would rob Hamas of further leverage.

Senior Hamas figures in Gaza also do not believe that Israel will abide by the deal, regardless of US guarantees, after its efforts to assassinate members of its political leadership in Doha last month. 

After the proposal was announced on Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated on X that the deal would allow the Israeli military continued access to parts of Gaza, and that his government would “forcibly resist” the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state, defying the US proposal to create a “credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood.”

Hamas has maintained that it will refuse any efforts to disarm until a Palestinian state has been established.

Israel has killed at least 66,225 Palestinians in Gaza since October 2023, according to local health authorities.


Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training
Updated 02 October 2025

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training

Kuwaiti and Bahraini academies reaffirm cooperation in diplomatic training
  • Meeting focused on workshops and programs to improve efficiency of ministry of foreign affairs’ employees
  • Latest digital platforms in use in the diplomatic sector also highlighted

LONDON: Kuwait and Bahrain reaffirmed their cooperation in diplomatic training and studies during a visit by a Kuwaiti delegation to the Mohamed bin Mubarak Al-Khalifa Academy for Diplomatic Studies in Manama this week.

Sheikha Muneera Al-Khalifa, the academy’s director general, emphasized the importance of exchanging experiences in diplomatic training and digital transformation of administrative work, the Kuwait News Agency reported.

Her meeting with Nasser Sabeeh Al-Sabeeh, Kuwait’s assistant foreign minister at the Saud Al-Nasser Al-Sabah Kuwait Diplomatic Institute, reaffirmed the ongoing cooperation in diplomatic training with Kuwait.

The meeting also focused on the academy’s training, development strategies, workshops, and programs designed to improve the efficiency of employees at the ministry of foreign affairs. Additionally, it highlighted the latest digital platforms in use in the diplomatic sector, enhancing efficiency and improving the quality of diplomatic work.

Al-Sabeeh said that the Bahraini academy plays a crucial role in developing the competencies of personnel in the foreign ministry through modernized training programs, KUNA reported.