Israel Says it Hit Hezbollah Arms Facilities in Beirut’s Southern Suburbs

This picture shows the rubble of destroyed buildings the site of last night's Israeli airstrike that targeted the Laylaki neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on October 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (Photo by Anwar AMRO / AFP)
This picture shows the rubble of destroyed buildings the site of last night's Israeli airstrike that targeted the Laylaki neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on October 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (Photo by Anwar AMRO / AFP)
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Israel Says it Hit Hezbollah Arms Facilities in Beirut’s Southern Suburbs

This picture shows the rubble of destroyed buildings the site of last night's Israeli airstrike that targeted the Laylaki neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on October 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (Photo by Anwar AMRO / AFP)
This picture shows the rubble of destroyed buildings the site of last night's Israeli airstrike that targeted the Laylaki neighborhood in Beirut's southern suburbs on October 24, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hezbollah. (Photo by Anwar AMRO / AFP)

The Israeli military said Thursday it hit Hezbollah weapons production facilities in Beirut’s southern suburbs, in some of the fiercest strikes on the area since the Lebanon war began.

At least 17 raids levelled six buildings, according to Lebanon's official National News Agency, with a huge ball of fire enveloped in a tower of smoke soaring into the night sky.

Israel is fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon and has vowed to retaliate against Iran for an October 1 missile attack.

The war in Lebanon erupted last month, nearly a year after Hezbollah began low-intensity cross-border fire into Israel in support of Hamas in Gaza following its October 7, 2023 attack.

The Israeli “air force conducted intelligence-based strikes on several weapons storage and manufacturing facilities belonging to the Hezbollah terrorist organization" in the southern suburbs of the capital, the Israeli military said.

It said that it had "struck more than 160 Hezbollah targets over the past day, including infrastructure sites across Lebanon.”

The NNA called the nighttime raids on the southern suburbs "the most violent in the area since the beginning of the war.”

Six buildings were destroyed around the neighborhood of Laylaki, the NNA said, including a residential complex hit by four Israeli strikes that caused "a large fire.”

On Thursday, Hezbollah said it launched a "large rocket salvo" at the northern Israeli town of Safed, after vowing to keep firing into Israel until a ceasefire is reached not only in Lebanon but also in Gaza.



Middle East Aid Workers Say Rules of War Being Flouted

Members of the Lebanese Red Cross inspect damage after an Israeli bombardment -  AFP
Members of the Lebanese Red Cross inspect damage after an Israeli bombardment - AFP
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Middle East Aid Workers Say Rules of War Being Flouted

Members of the Lebanese Red Cross inspect damage after an Israeli bombardment -  AFP
Members of the Lebanese Red Cross inspect damage after an Israeli bombardment - AFP

Flagrant violations of the laws of war in the escalating conflict in the Middle East are setting a dangerous precedent, aid workers in the region warn.

"The rules of war are being broken in such a flagrant way... (it) is setting a precedent that we have not seen in any other conflict," Marwan Jilani, the vice president of the Palestine Red Crescent (PCRS), told AFP.

Speaking last week during a meeting in Geneva of the 191 national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, he lamented a "total disregard for human life (and) for international humanitarian law".

Amid Israel's devastating retaliatory operation on October 7 in the Gaza Strip , local aid workers are striving to deliver assistance while facing the same risks as the rest of the population, he said.

The PCRS has more than 900 staff and several thousand volunteers inside Gaza, where more than 43,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the territory's health ministry, and where the UN says virtually the entire population has been repeatedly displaced.

- 'Deliberate targeting' -

"They're part of the community," said Jilani. "I think every single member of our staff has lost family members."

He decried especially what he said was a "deliberate targeting of the health sector".

Israel rejects such accusations and maintains that it is carrying out its military operations in both Gaza and Lebanon in accordance with international law.

But Jilani said that "many of our staff, including doctors and nurses... were detained, were taken for weeks (and) were tortured".

Since the war began, 34 PRCS staff and volunteers have been killed in Gaza, and another two in the West Bank, "most of them while serving", he said.

Four other staff members are still being held, their whereabouts and condition unknown.

Jilani warned that the disregard for basic international law in the expanding conflict was eroding the belief that such laws even exist.

A "huge casualty of this war", he said, "is the belief within the Middle East that there is no international law".

- 'Unbelievable' -

Uri Shacham, chief of staff at the Israeli's emergency aid organization Magen David Adom (MDA), also decried the total disregard for laws requiring the protection of humanitarians.

- Gaza scenario looming -

The Red Cross in Lebanon, where for the past month Israel has been launching ground operations and dramatically escalating its airstrikes against Hezbollah, also condemned the slide.

Thirteen of its volunteers have been recently injured on ambulance missions.

One of its top officials, Samar Abou Jaoudeh, told AFP that they did not appear to have been targeted directly.

"But nevertheless, not being able to reach the injured people, and (missiles) hitting right in front of an ambulance is also not respecting IHL," she said, stressing the urgent need to ensure more respect for international law on the ground.

Abou Jaoudeh feared Lebanon, where at least 1,620 people have been killed since September 23, according to an AFP tally based on official figures, could suffer the same fate as Gaza.

"We hope that no country would face anything that Gaza is facing now, but unfortunately a bit of that scenario is beginning to be similar in Lebanon," she said.

The Lebanese Red Cross, she said, was preparing "for all scenarios... but we just hope that it wouldn't reach this point".