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Lebanon awaits US envoy, maintaining a firm stance on UN Resolution 1701

White House envoy to the Middle East Amos Hochstein is due in Lebanon on Tuesday. (File/AFP)
White House envoy to the Middle East Amos Hochstein is due in Lebanon on Tuesday. (File/AFP)
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Updated 18 November 2024

Lebanon awaits US envoy, maintaining a firm stance on UN Resolution 1701

White House envoy to the Middle East Amos Hochstein is due in Lebanon on Tuesday. (File/AFP)
  • Israeli strike on central Beirut kills five

BEIRUT: White House envoy to the Middle East Amos Hochstein is due in Lebanon on Tuesday for talks on a ceasefire as the Israeli army continued to carry out violent airstrikes, causing massive destruction.

Airstrikes receded in Beirut and its southern suburbs but intensified in southern Lebanon.

Sunday saw intense attacks and assassinations in Beirut’s southern suburbs and neighborhoods.

Israeli media outlets reported Hochstein would arrive in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.

His visit comes as part of his previously disrupted efforts to reach a diplomatic solution to stop the expanded war, which has been ongoing for 60 days between the Israeli army and Hezbollah.

Lebanon has yet to confirm Hochstein’s visit to Beirut. Citing a Lebanese political source, Reuters reported that “Hochstein arrives in Beirut on Tuesday,” while Israel’s Channel 12 announced that “Hochstein arrives in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.”

Fares Gemayel, media advisor to the caretaker prime minister, said Najib Mikati’s schedule was still the same and had yet to be modified.

He told Arab News: “We were not informed of Hochstein’s visit, and just like you, we heard that he is coming and that he is meeting with Mikati and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, but nothing is confirmed.”

Following his meeting with Berri, caretaker Labor Minister Mustafa Bayram said Berri looped him in on the draft ceasefire proposal, adding that “the situation was positive,” but “all is well that ends well.”

Bayram, a Hezbollah minister, said that Berri — whom Hezbollah assigned to negotiate with the West — was waiting for Hochstein’s visit on Tuesday.

“He’s waiting to inform him of Lebanon’s positive stance in this regard, and therefore, all eyes will be on the Israeli stance, whether it wants to stop its aggression or continue with its war crimes witnessed live by people,” he added.

Bayram pointed out that the expansion of war was an Israeli decision, saying that “war crimes are not a sign of victory for the aggressor.”

He clarified: “Lebanon is committed to Resolution 1701 fully, including its mechanisms, so why do we want to put in place other mechanisms that would complicate the matter?”

Bayram emphasized that “there are points in the draft that were not even discussed because it’s impossible to accept them, including Israel’s right to act freely.”

He said no patriotic Lebanese would agree to such issues and waive their sovereignty.

He also stressed that Hezbollah “abides by Resolution 1701, which stipulates that Israel should stop its violations against Lebanon, so is it going to stop them?”

He added: “The resistance is a reaction and not an action. If the Israelis abide by the resolution, we can have a different discussion, especially since what the resistance owns is no longer linked to a 10 km geographical area.

“The resistance can fight anywhere, but it all comes down to whether or not the Israelis will abide by 1701.”

Bayram believes that “the more you concede to the Israelis, the more they ask and kill you.”

Hezbollah submitted to Berri its response to the US draft proposal based on Resolution 1701.

However, the response leaked to some media outlets and included comments proposing a return to how things were before the last war. According to previous Israeli officials’ statements, Israel rejects this.

The Lebanese side is seeking international and American guarantees regarding Israel’s commitment to the agreement, ensuring that Israel does not violate Resolution 1701 under any pretext to carry out operations in Lebanon.

Furthermore, Lebanon also demands that the monitoring committee for the implementation of Resolution 1701 remain limited to the US, France, Lebanon, Israel, and the UN without any expansion.

Hezbollah rejects “any expansion of the role of UNIFIL forces” and “firmly opposes any enhancement of the UNIFIL forces’ mandate,” emphasizing that “coordination between these forces and the Lebanese army must persist, and that UNIFIL should not operate in private areas without prior agreement with the army.”

Furthermore, Hezbollah calls for the “prompt return of displaced individuals, preventing Israel from establishing a border security zone, and the recognition of Lebanon’s entitlement to reconstruction without external interference.”

Additionally, they demand the release of Lebanese citizens detained by Israel during the recent confrontations.

Israeli opposition leader Benny Gantz, head of the State Camp party, stated on Monday that “the condition for any agreement with Lebanon is the absolute freedom of Israeli operations in response to any violation of the agreement.”

The Iranian Foreign Ministry stated on Monday that “the Lebanese are capable of determining their interests and making decisions regarding any initiative related to halting Israel’s crimes.”

It indicated that Tehran would spare no effort in assisting the Lebanese people.

Israel escalated its military actions against Hezbollah on Sunday, resuming targeted assassinations that included the killing of Hezbollah’s media relations officer Mohammed Afif, along with four of his associates — Hilal Tarmas, Moussa Haidar, Mahmoud Al-Sharqawi, and Hussein Ramadan — in an airstrike on Beirut.

Israel announced that Mahmoud Madi, head of operations for Hezbollah’s southern front, was also targeted in a separate airstrike on Beirut later that evening.

The southern front of Lebanon remained intense on Monday as Israeli soldiers attempted to reach Al-Bayada hill after passing through the town of Chamaa in the Tyre district.

They conducted extensive airstrikes to secure their movements, targeting the valleys with phosphorus shells.

Also on Monday, Hezbollah announced that its fighters targeted an Israeli army gathering south of the town of Khiam for the fourth time and another group with the Israeli army in the settlement of Kiryat Shmona.

Israeli media reported that “rocket debris fell in Goren in the Upper Galilee, causing damage to a house, a building, and vehicles during the rocket barrage on Kiryat Shmona.”

The Israeli army announced the destruction of dozens of rocket launch platforms and combat equipment in southern Lebanon.

Israeli media reported that over 1,450 rockets had been launched toward Israel since the onset of the conflict.

The Israeli army carried out a series of violent airstrikes targeting the areas of Tyre, Nabatieh, Iqlim Al-Tufah, and Jizzine, causing massive destruction.

A strike on the water facility building in Tyre killed several people, including the Deputy Mayor of Burj Al-Shamli Qassim Wehbi and the Mukhtar of Tyre Samer Shoghari.

In a separate incident, two people were killed by an air raid that hit a house on Al-Madinah Al-Kashfiyah Road, between the areas of Nabatieh Al-Fawqa and Zawtar.

Additionally, airstrikes on the city of Nabatieh killed several citizens, namely Fadel and Hassan Mansour, Jawad Al-Sabouri, and Hussein Mansour, leaving several more injured.

Louai Al-Moussawi, whose family was killed by an Israeli strike when the attacks first started, was also killed in Nabatieh Al-Fawqa.

Red Cross and International Committee of the Red Cross ambulances entered the town of Baraachit.

They recovered the remains of the paramedics of the Hezbollah-affiliated Islamic Health Authority, who were killed in an airstrike that targeted the area weeks ago.

Lebanon's Health Ministry said Israel also struck a densely packed Beirut neighborhood, killing five people.

Monday's raid targeted a residential apartment, an office for Mayor Hasan Shuman, and a street cafe.

Zakat Al-Blat is a densely populated neighborhood shared between Hezbollah and the Amal Movement.

Hundreds of displaced people from the southern and south suburbs have taken refuge.

Relief aid was being distributed to the people in the area.

The area was targeted a month ago when an Israeli warplane bombed a residential apartment in a building that was used as a center for paramedics of the Islamic Health Authority affiliated with Hezbollah.

The raid led to the death of eight people.


’Trump’s legacy crumbles’, Israelis call on US President to end Gaza war

’Trump’s legacy crumbles’, Israelis call on US President to end Gaza war
Updated 07 September 2025

’Trump’s legacy crumbles’, Israelis call on US President to end Gaza war

’Trump’s legacy crumbles’, Israelis call on US President to end Gaza war
  • A video released by Hamas on Friday featured Israeli hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal, 24, saying that he was being held in Gaza City and feared being killed by the military’s assault on the city
  • Hamas has acknowledged it would no longer govern Gaza once the war ends but has refused to discuss laying down its weapons

TEL AVIV: Thousands of Israelis rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday night, issuing direct appeals to US President Donald Trump to force an end to the Gaza war and secure the release of the hostages.
Protesters packed a public square outside the military headquarters, waving Israeli flags and holding placards with images of the hostages. Some carried signs, including one that read: ‘Trump’s legacy crumbles as the Gaza war persists’.
Another said: “PRESIDENT TRUMP, SAVE THE HOSTAGES NOW!“
“We think that Trump is the only man in the world who has authority over Bibi, that can force Bibi to do this,” said Tel Aviv resident Boaz, 40, referring to the Israeli prime minister.
There is growing despair among many Israelis at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who has ordered the military to capture a major urban center where hostages may be held.
Families of the hostages and their supporters fear the assault on Gaza City could endanger their loved ones, a concern the military leadership shares, according to Israeli officials.
Orna Neutra, the mother of an Israeli soldier who was killed on October 7, 2023 and whose body is being held in Gaza by militants, accused the government of abandoning its citizens.
“We truly hope that the United States will push both sides to finally reach a comprehensive deal that will bring them home,” she told the rally. Her son, Omer, is also American.
Tel Aviv has witnessed weekly demonstrations that have grown in size, with protesters demanding that the government secure a ceasefire with Hamas to obtain the release of hostages. Organizers said Saturday night’s rally was attended by tens of thousands. A large demonstration was also held in Jerusalem.

NO PURPOSE
Trump had pledged a swift end to the war in Gaza during his presidential campaign, but nearly eight months into his second term, a resolution has remained elusive. On Friday, he said that Washington was engaged in “very deep” negotiations with Hamas.
Israeli forces have carried out heavy strikes on the suburbs of Gaza City, where, according to a global hunger monitor, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are facing famine. Israeli officials acknowledge that hunger exists in Gaza but deny that the territory is facing famine. On Saturday, the military warned civilians in Gaza City to leave and move to southern Gaza.
There are hundreds of thousands of Palestinians sheltering in the city that was home to around a million before the war.
A video released by Hamas on Friday featured Israeli hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal, 24, saying that he was being held in Gaza City and feared being killed by the military’s assault on the city. Rights groups have condemned such videos of hostages as inhumane. Israel says that it is psychological warfare.
The war has become unpopular among some segments of Israeli society, and opinion polls show that most Israelis want Netanyahu’s right-wing government to negotiate a permanent ceasefire with Hamas that secures the release of the hostages.
“The war has no purpose at all, except for violence and death,” said Boaz from Tel Aviv. Adam, 48, said it had become obvious that soldiers were being sent to war for “nothing.”
Hamas has offered to release some hostages for a temporary ceasefire, similar to terms that were discussed in July before negotiations mediated by the US and Arab states collapsed.
The militant group, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades but today controls only parts of the enclave, on Saturday once again said that it would release all hostages if Israel agreed to end the war and withdraw its forces from Gaza.
Netanyahu is pushing for an all-or-nothing deal that would see all of the hostages released at once and Hamas surrendering.
The prime minister has said Gaza City is a Hamas stronghold and capturing it is necessary to defeat the Palestinian militant group, whose October 2023 attack on Israel led to the war.
Hamas has acknowledged it would no longer govern Gaza once the war ends but has refused to discuss laying down its weapons. 

 


Gaza aid flotilla from Tunisia delayed

Gaza aid flotilla from Tunisia delayed
Updated 06 September 2025

Gaza aid flotilla from Tunisia delayed

Gaza aid flotilla from Tunisia delayed

TUNIS: The departure from Tunisia of pro-Palestinian activists seeking to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza with aid boats has been postponed, organizers said on Saturday.
It was planned for Sunday, but organizers said they rescheduled the boats’ departure from Tunis to Wednesday, September 10, due to “technical and logistical reasons beyond management’s control.”


The Maghreb Sumud Flotilla, which aimed to join boats of the Global Sumud Flotilla that have already left from Spain and Italy, had already been delayed by bad weather.


UAE, Jordan, Arab Parliament condemn Israeli calls for displacement of Palestinians

UAE, Jordan, Arab Parliament condemn Israeli calls for displacement of Palestinians
Updated 06 September 2025

UAE, Jordan, Arab Parliament condemn Israeli calls for displacement of Palestinians

UAE, Jordan, Arab Parliament condemn Israeli calls for displacement of Palestinians
  • Israel PM’s comments reveal policy of ‘ethnic cleansing,’ says parliamentary speaker
  • Jordanian minister says kingdom stands with united Arab front in rejecting displacement

ABU DHABI/AMMAN/CAIRO: The UAE and the Arab Parliament on Saturday both strongly condemned remarks by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suggesting that Palestinians in Gaza should be allowed to voluntarily leave, warning that such comments amount to a violation of international law and threaten regional stability.

Israel on Saturday called on residents of Gaza City to leave as its forces advance deeper into the enclave’s largest urban area.

The Israeli army told people to flee to a “humanitarian zone” in the south ahead of a planned offensive to occupy the urban center.

In a statement, the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs reaffirmed the country’s support for Egypt’s efforts to stand with the Palestinian people, prevent displacement, and push for an immediate ceasefire, the Emirates News Agency reported.

The ministry described Netanyahu’s remarks as “a dangerous continuation of occupation policies” and stressed that any attempt to uproot Palestinians from their land constitutes “a flagrant violation of international law and United Nations resolutions.”

The UAE reiterated its categorical rejection of forced displacement or any attempt to undermine the Palestinian cause, affirming that defending Palestinian rights is a moral, humanitarian, and legal obligation.

It also emphasized that lasting stability in the region depends on a two-state solution and the establishment of an independent, sovereign Palestinian state.

Jordan also reaffirmed its stance, with Minister of Government Communication Mohammed Momani saying the kingdom stood with a united Arab front in rejecting displacement.

He described Israel’s far-right aggression as a violation of international law and human rights, calling forced displacement a war crime, and stressed that Palestinians have an inalienable right to self-determination and statehood.

Separately, Arab Parliament Speaker Mohammed bin Ahmed Al-Yamahi condemned Netanyahu’s comments as part of a longstanding policy of “ethnic cleansing and forced displacement” by the occupation authorities.

He said such rhetoric amounted to war crimes that “do not drop with time” and represent “a direct threat to international peace and security.”

Al-Yamahi reiterated the Arab Parliament’s rejection of any displacement attempts in Gaza, the West Bank, or elsewhere in occupied Palestinian territory.

All three condemned any attempt to undermine the Palestinian cause and urged the international community and UN bodies to act to halt violations, protect Palestinians, and support their right to an independent, sovereign state.


Palestinian Ministry of Justice condemns US sanctions on rights groups

Palestinian Ministry of Justice condemns US sanctions on rights groups
Updated 06 September 2025

Palestinian Ministry of Justice condemns US sanctions on rights groups

Palestinian Ministry of Justice condemns US sanctions on rights groups
  • US administration announced measures on Thursday against the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights in Gaza and Al-Haq

RAMALLAH: The Palestinian Ministry of Justice on Saturday denounced the US for imposing sanctions on three leading Palestinian human rights organizations, the Wafa news agency reported.

The US administration announced measures on Thursday against the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights in Gaza and Al-Haq, prompting what the ministry described as “a dangerous and unacceptable targeting” of Palestinian civil society.

It said in a statement that the groups documented violations committed by the Israeli occupation against Palestinians, their land and holy sites, and operated in line with international law and humanitarian standards.

The ministry voiced full support for the sanctioned organizations and urged Washington to reverse its decision.

It also called on the international community and UN bodies to intervene “to protect the Palestinian people and their institutions.”


Iraq moves to revive Syrian export route, expand refining capacity

Iraq moves to revive Syrian export route, expand refining capacity
Updated 06 September 2025

Iraq moves to revive Syrian export route, expand refining capacity

Iraq moves to revive Syrian export route, expand refining capacity
  • Iraqi oil ‘can feed global markets for 120 years,’ PM Al-Sudani tells energy forum
  • Talks on reactivating route come as Baghdad seeks investment in refining, gas utilization

BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani said on Saturday that his government has begun work to revive the Iraqi-Syrian oil export line as part of efforts to diversify export outlets and expand refining capacity.

Speaking at the Baghdad International Energy Forum, Al-Sudani said talks had been held “weeks ago” on reactivating the route, adding that work was underway on a 685 km Basra–Haditha pipeline aligned with the project.

“Iraqi oil will continue to feed global markets for more than 120 years at the least estimates, although our export share is not commensurate with the size of the reserve, productive capacity and population,” he said, according to the Iraq News Agency.

Al-Sudani highlighted the government’s drive to attract investment, particularly in refining and gas utilization.

He said Iraq aims to end the flaring of associated gas and make full use of around 1.3 billion standard cubic feet per day.

He also noted expansions at existing refineries, the inauguration of the Karbala refinery, and six new investment opportunities in the refining sector designed to strengthen partnerships with the private sector.

Al-Sudani said Iraq’s strategic goal was to convert at least 40 percent of its crude production into higher-value derivatives by 2030, with several projects already launched to support the plan.