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President Aoun condemns Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon

Update President Aoun condemns Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon
Residents gather near a crater caused by Israeli airstrikes that targeted a site selling heavy machinery in the southern village of Msayleh, Lebanon on Oct. 11, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 11 October 2025

President Aoun condemns Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon

President Aoun condemns Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon
  • Foreign Ministry warns of disruption to the army’s disarmament plan
  • Raids target bulldozer and excavator yards in Msaileh, destroying more than 300 vehicles

BEIRUT: President Joseph Aoun on Saturday condemned Israeli strikes on civilian sites in southern Lebanon, which reportedly killed at least one person.

“The seriousness of the latest attack stems from the fact that it comes after the ceasefire agreement in Gaza,” he added, questioning whether Israel now sought to expand its attacks on Lebanon.

The Health Ministry said the raids killed a Syrian national and injured seven people, including two Syrian women, on the outskirts of Msaileh Al-Najjarieh, Saida.

The victim, who lived in Ain Qenia in the Hasbaya district, was identified as Hazem Kabul, a truck driver delivering vegetables from the south to other regions.

The attack also injured his sister, who was traveling with him in the truck.

In a statement, the Lebanese Foreign Ministry said that the attack “constitutes a blatant violation of UN Resolution 1701 and the ceasefire agreement, which Israel continues to disregard.”

The ministry warned that “the ongoing hostilities could hinder the Lebanese army’s national efforts to implement its plan aimed at confining weapons to the hands of the legitimate forces, and preserving security and stability in southern Lebanon.”

Israeli warplanes carried out 10 raids that shook neighboring towns, targeting the outskirts of the Msaileh highway leading to Al-Najjarieh and the adjacent valley, causing significant damage.




Above, heavy machinery destroyed by Israeli airstrikes in the southern village of Msayleh, Lebanon on Oct. 11, 2025. (AP)

The town is home to the residence of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who negotiates on behalf of Hezbollah with foreign parties.

Al-Najjarieh’s mayor, Abbas Hallal, told Arab News that “the location of the raids is only 200 meters from Nabih Berri’s residence,” adding that he “visits the property now and then.”

Zafer Nasser, secretary-general of the Progressive Socialist Party, told Arab News that “an attack of such magnitude surely carries several messages to many recipients, one of whom might be Nabih Berri and others.”

He added: “The attacks send a clear message that nowhere in Lebanon is safe. By targeting Msaileh, they carry a direct message to Nabih Berri.”

Nasser believes that “the countries backing the ceasefire deal must stop Israel’s ongoing attacks, as it hasn’t abided by the agreement and has shown no commitment to it since the day it came into force.”

An official source told Arab News that the Foreign Ministry’s statement was clear in asserting that the attack “aims to undermine the state monopoly on arms that Lebanon is upholding and the Lebanese army is enforcing.”

But the source added at the same time that “the strike may also be a message to Parliament Speaker Berri to pressure Hezbollah into agreeing to hand over its weapons.”

The airstrikes destroyed more than 300 vehicles, including bulldozers and excavators. The showrooms that were destroyed and damaged are among the largest and most prominent heavy machinery showrooms in Lebanon.

They also caused severe damage to the power grid, shattered the windows of dozens of homes, shops, and commercial establishments hundreds of meters away from the strike site.

The targeted area is known for being a mixed region, home to people of different religious sects.

Hallal told Arab News: “The cost of the damage is estimated at around $50 million. This area is well known in Lebanon as a center for selling bulldozers and excavators, attracting buyers from all over the country.”

He confirmed that the area had “never been targeted by Israel during the recent war, nor had any warnings been issued to evacuate it.”

An unexploded missile remains at the site. The Engineering Regiment of the Lebanese Army said in a statement that “it will wait for 72 hours as the missile’s batteries are still active, after which it will be transferred to a safe location for controlled detonation.”

Public Works and Transport Minister Fayez Rasamny visited the attack site and assessed the damage on behalf of the president and the prime minister.

Interior Minister Ahmed Al-Hajjar and Labor Minister Mohammed Haidar also visited the area and toured nearby homes that sustained damage.

Rasamny described the event as a “massacre and a crime. We will confront it through our unity.”

Since the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon came into effect on Nov. 27, 2025, through US-French mediation, Israel has launched near-daily airstrikes on border areas and deep into the south, reaching as far as the Lebanese-Syrian border.

These strikes resulted in the killing of more than 200 people, including Hezbollah members and civilians, including children.

Speaking about the attack, Berri said: “Be it in its form and substance, its timing and location, or in the objectives it targeted, it will not change our convictions, our principles, or those of our people, who once again, with their lives, their homes, and their livelihoods, are paying the price for their attachment to their land and their legitimate right to a dignified life.”

Berri stated that what happened “is not an aggression against Msayleh, its residents, and the owners of its industrial facilities, but rather an aggression against all of Lebanon that targeted both Christians and Muslims.”

The Israeli military, meanwhile, claimed that it “targeted and dismantled a Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon, where engineering machinery was being used to rebuild the terrorist infrastructure.”

It noted that “the presence of this machinery, along with Hezbollah’s activity in the area, constitutes a violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon.”

The Israeli military claimed Hezbollah “continues its efforts to rebuild terrorist infrastructure throughout Lebanon, using the Lebanese population as human shields.”

 It vowed to “continue its operations to remove any threat to Israel.”


61 bodies of migrants recovered in west of Libya’s Tripoli, medics center says

Updated 44 sec ago

61 bodies of migrants recovered in west of Libya’s Tripoli, medics center says

61 bodies of migrants recovered in west of Libya’s Tripoli, medics center says
The bodies were recovered from the area from Zuwara to Ras Ijdir, near the border with Tunisia
Pictures of medics were posted on the center’s verified Facebook page showing them recovering the bodies from the beaches and placing them in white plastic bags

TRIPOLI: At least 61 bodies of migrants have been recovered over the past two weeks on the coast west of the Libyan capital Tripoli, a medical center said in a statement on Saturday.
The Emergency Medicine and Support Center, under the health ministry, said that the bodies were recovered from the area from Zuwara to Ras Ijdir, near the border with Tunisia.
“Remains of three bodies were found in Mellitah and 12 bodies in Zuwara, all of them belonging to irregular migrants,” the center said.
Another group of 34 bodies was recovered in Zuwara, Abu Kammash and Mellitah, the center added.
It added that 12 bodies were buried, but some others were transported to the morgue for autopsies and documentation.
Pictures of medics were posted on the center’s verified Facebook page showing them recovering the bodies from the beaches and placing them in white plastic bags.
In mid-September, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said at least 50 people had died after a vessel carrying 75 Sudanese refugees caught fire off Libya’s coast.
According to IOM data, a total of 894,890 migrants from 45 nationalities across 100 Libyan municipalities were residing in the country.
Libya has become a transit route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty to Europe across the Mediterranean since the fall in 2011 of dictator Muammar Qaddafi during a NATO-backed uprising.

West Bank situation ‘needs another agreement to expel settlers’

Palestinians attend morning mass at Christ the Redeemer Catholic Church in the West Bank village of Taybeh, Sept. 28, 2025. (AP)
Palestinians attend morning mass at Christ the Redeemer Catholic Church in the West Bank village of Taybeh, Sept. 28, 2025. (AP)
Updated 11 October 2025

West Bank situation ‘needs another agreement to expel settlers’

Palestinians attend morning mass at Christ the Redeemer Catholic Church in the West Bank village of Taybeh, Sept. 28, 2025. (AP)
  • Palestinians say uninvolved civilians have been caught up in the raids and blame the army for not defending them from near-daily violence by settlers
  • Dwindling Christian communities in the occupied Palestinian territory continue to struggle amid threats

TAYBEH, West Bank: Early on Sundays, bells call the faithful to worship at the three churches in this hilltop village that the Gospel narrates Jesus visited. It is now the last entirely Christian one in the occupied West Bank.
Proudly Palestinian, Taybeh’s Christians — Catholics of the Roman and Greek Melkite rites, and Greek Orthodox — long most for independence and peace for this part of the Holy Land.
But that hope feels increasingly remote as they struggle with the threats of violence from Jewish settlers and the intensifying restrictions on movement imposed by Israel. Many also say they fear Islamist radicalization will grow in the area as conflicts escalate across the region.
And even Thursday’s announcement of an agreement to pause fighting in Gaza didn’t assuage those urgent concerns.

We don’t feel safe when we go from here to Ramallah or to any village in Palestine. Always there is a fear for us to be killed, to be … something terrible.

Marina Marouf, Vice principal at the Catholic school

“The situation in the West Bank, in my opinion, needs another agreement — to move away and expel the settlers from our lands,” the Rev. Bashar Fawadleh, parish priest of Christ the Redeemer Catholic Church, told The Associated Press. “We are so tired of this life.”
On a recent Sunday, families flocked to Mass at the church, where a Vatican and a Palestinian flag flank the altar, and a tall mosaic illustrates Jesus’ arrival in the village, then called Ephraim.
More families gathered at St. George Greek Orthodox Church. Filled with icons written in Arabic and Greek, it’s just down the street, overlooking hillside villas among olive trees.
“We’re struggling too much. We don’t see the light,” said its priest, the Rev. David Khoury. “We feel like we are in a big prison.”
A decades-old conflict spirals
The West Bank is the area between Israel and Jordan that Israel occupied in the 1967 war and that Palestinians want for a future state, together with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. Israel seized them from Jordan and Egypt in that war.
The Israel-Hamas war that has devastated Gaza since Hamas-led militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, has affected the strip’s tiny Christian community. The Catholic church was hit by an Israeli shell in July, though it’s functioning again.
Violence has also surged in the West Bank. Israeli military operations have grown to respond to what the army calls an increasing militant threat, most visible in frequent attacks at checkpoints.
Palestinians say uninvolved civilians have been caught up in the raids and blame the army for not defending them from near-daily violence by settlers.
After leading the music ministry at a recent Sunday’s Catholic Mass, as he’s done for six decades, Suheil Nazzal walked to the village’s edge to survey his terraces of olive trees.
Settlers no longer allow him and other villagers to harvest them, he said. He also blames the settlers on an opposite hilltop for setting a fire this summer that burned dangerously close to the cemetery where his parents are buried and to the ruins of Taybeh’s oldest church, the 5th-century St. George.
Christian families leaving the Holy Land
Nazzal plans to stay in Taybeh, but his family lives in the US Clergy said at least a dozen families have left Taybeh, population 1,200, and more are considering leaving because of the violence, dwindling economy opportunities, and the way checkpoints restrict daily life.
Victor Barakat, a Catholic, and his wife Nadeen Khoury, who is Greek Orthodox, moved with their three children from Massachusetts to Taybeh, where Khoury grew up.
“We love Palestine,” she said after attending a service at St. George. “We wanted to raise the children here, to learn the culture, the language, family traditions.”
Yet while hoping they can stay in Taybeh, they say the security situation feels even more precarious than during the intifada, or Palestinian uprising, of the early 2000s, when hundreds of Israelis were killed, including in suicide bombings, and thousands of Palestinians were killed in Israeli military operations.
“Everyone is unsafe. You never know who’s going to stop you,” Barakat said, adding they no longer take the children to after-school activities because of the lack of protections on the roads.
And while he rejoiced for the agreement to pause fighting in Gaza, he doubted it would have an impact on settler attacks nearer home.
“The agenda for the West Bank is still more complicated,” Barakat said.
Taybeh’s Christian churches run schools, ranging from kindergarten to high school, as well as sports and music programs. The impact on young people of the current spiral of mistrust and violence is worrisome for educators.
“We don’t feel safe when we go from here to Ramallah or to any (village) in Palestine. Always there is a fear for us to be killed, to be … something terrible,” said Marina Marouf, vice principal at the Catholic school.
She said students have had to shelter at the school for hours waiting for the opening of “flying checkpoints” — road gates that Israeli authorities close, usually in response to attacks in the area.
Trying to keep the presence — and the faith
From villages like Taybeh to once popular, now struggling tourist destinations like Bethlehem, Christians account for between 1 percent-2 percent of the West Bank’s roughly 3 million residents, the vast majority Muslim. Across the wider Middle East, the Christian population has steadily declined as people have fled conflict and attacks.
But for many, maintaining a presence in the birthplace of Christianity is essential to identity and faith.
“I love my country because I love my Christ,” Fawadleh said. “My Christ is Ibn Al-Balad,” he added, using an Arabic term meaning “son of the land.”
Israel, whose founding declaration includes safeguarding freedom of religion and all holy places, sees itself as an island of religious tolerance in a volatile region. But some church authorities and monitoring groups have lamented a recent increase in anti-Christian sentiment and harassment, particularly in Jerusalem’s old city.
While those targeting Christians are a tiny minority of Jewish extremists, attacks such as spitting toward clergy are enough to create a sense of impunity and thus overall fear, said Hana Bendcowsky. She leads the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations of the Rossing Center for Education and Dialogue.
The Catholic Church’s Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, has also highlighted growing problems in the West Bank, from settlers’ attacks to lack of jobs and of permits to move freely, adding that more Christians might decide to leave.
For the Franciscan priest who’s the new custodian of the Holy Land and oversees more than 300 friars in the region ministering to various holy sites, “the first big duty we have here is to stay.”
“We can’t stop the hemorrhage, but we will continue to be here and be alongside everyone,” said the Rev. Francesco Ielpo, whom Pope Leo XIV confirmed three months ago to the Holy Land mission established by St. Francis more than 800 years ago.
Struggling to provide hope among despair
Ielpo said the biggest challenge for Christians is to offer a different approach to social fractures deepened by the war in Gaza.
“Even where before there were relationships, opportunities for an encounter or even just for coexistence, now suspicions arise. ‘Can I trust the other? Am I really safe?’” he said.
Michael Hajjal worships at Taybeh’s Greek Orthodox church, and is torn between his love for the village, the constant fear he feels, and the concern for his son’s future.
“What kind of future can I create for my son while we’re under occupation and in this economic situation?” he said. “Even young people of 16 or 17 years old are saying, ‘I wish I were dead.’”
Hope — in addition to practical help ranging from youth programs to employment workshops — is what the clergy of Taybeh’s churches are working together to provide in the face of such despair.
“Still we are awaiting the third day as a Palestinian,” Fawadleh said. “The third day that means the new life, the freedom, the independence and the new salvation for our people.”

 


France's Macron heads to Egypt on Monday to back Gaza ceasefire deal

France's Macron heads to Egypt on Monday to back Gaza ceasefire deal
Updated 11 October 2025

France's Macron heads to Egypt on Monday to back Gaza ceasefire deal

France's Macron heads to Egypt on Monday to back Gaza ceasefire deal
  • The French presidency didn’t say whether Macron would be meeting with Trump
  • Macron will hold discussions "with partners on the next steps of the peace plan's implementation", the Elysee said

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron will travel to Egypt on Monday to back the Gaza ceasefire deal brokered by the United States, and to discuss implementation of its next phases, the Elysee Palace said.
The French presidency did not say whether Macron would be meeting with US President Donald Trump, who may also go to Egypt and who brokered the deal agreed by Israel and Hamas.
Macron will go to Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt's Red Sea resort town which hosted the indirect talks that resulted in the Gaza deal.
There, he will hold discussions "with partners on the next steps of the peace plan's implementation", the Elysee said.
It added that Macron's trip was a continuation of a Franco-Saudi initiative to foster peace and security in the Middle East, based on "the two-state solution" of Israeli and Palestinian states coexisting.
France last month recognised a Palestinian state as part of its drive towards that goal, infuriating Israel and earning criticism from the United States.
Macron's trip comes as France is mired in political crisis.
The president has just reappointed as prime minister Sebastien Lecornu, an ally who resigned from the post on Monday, and tasked him with forming a government to push through an austerity budget rejected by much of the French parliament.


Hamas thanks Trump for ceasefire but rejects Blair

Hamas thanks Trump for ceasefire but rejects Blair
Updated 11 October 2025

Hamas thanks Trump for ceasefire but rejects Blair

Hamas thanks Trump for ceasefire but rejects Blair
  • Dr. Basem Naim: US president needs to continue applying pressure on Israel to ensure it abides by deal
  • Ex-UK PM not welcome in any role rebuilding or governing Gaza ‘after destroying Iraq and Afghanistan’

LONDON: A senior Hamas figure has thanked US President Donald Trump for helping bring about a ceasefire in Gaza.

Dr. Basem Naim expressed his gratitude in an interview with Sky News, but said former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair would not be welcome in any role rebuilding or governing the Palestinian enclave.

“Without the personal interference of President Trump in this case, I don’t think that it would have happened to have reached the end of the war,” Naim said.

“Therefore, yes, we thank President Trump and his personal efforts to interfere and to pressure Israel to bring an end to this massacre and slaughtering.”

Naim said Trump would need to continue to apply pressure on Israel to ensure it keeps to its side of the deal, adding: “Without this pressure, without this personal interference from President Trump, this will not happen.

“We have already seen Netanyahu speaking to the media, threatening to go to war again if this doesn’t happen, if that doesn’t happen.”

There have been suggestions that the future governance of Gaza could feature Blair, who has been earmarked for a role on an international supervisory body that would administer the enclave during its reconstruction.

“When it comes to Tony Blair, unfortunately, we Palestinians, Arabs and Muslims and maybe others around the world have bad memories of him,” Naim said.

“We can still remember his role in killing, causing thousands or millions of deaths to innocent civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq. We can still remember him very well after destroying Iraq and Afghanistan.”


Hamas official says disarmament ‘out of the question’

Hamas official says disarmament ‘out of the question’
Updated 11 October 2025

Hamas official says disarmament ‘out of the question’

Hamas official says disarmament ‘out of the question’
  • “The proposed weapons handover is out of the question and not negotiable,” the official said
  • The 20-point plan promises amnesty to Hamas members who decommission their weapons

DOHA: Hamas’s disarmament as part of US President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza is “out of the question,” a Hamas official told AFP on Saturday.
“The proposed weapons handover is out of the question and not negotiable,” the official said.
The US president has indicated the issue of Hamas surrendering its weapons would be addressed in the second phase of the peace plan.
The 20-point plan promises amnesty to Hamas members who decommission their weapons and says they will be allowed to leave Gaza.
The Hamas official was speaking as a ceasefire holds in Gaza ahead of Monday’s 72-hour deadline for the release of Israeli hostages held since Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attacks.
Hamas’s disarmament and the pullback of Israeli forces are seen as key sticking points for Trump’s plan despite rising hopes for the end of two years of devastating war.