Preparations underway for Macron’s Visit to Lebanon

French President Emmanuel Macron. (AFP)
French President Emmanuel Macron. (AFP)
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Preparations underway for Macron’s Visit to Lebanon

French President Emmanuel Macron. (AFP)
French President Emmanuel Macron. (AFP)

Lebanon received official notice from France that President Emmanuel Macron is planning on visiting the country at the invitation of President Michel Aoun.

The date of the trip has not been set yet, but Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian is expected to travel to Beirut in June.

Le Drian is set to follow up on Beirut’s reform commitments to the CEDRE conference that was held in Paris in 2018.

Among these reforms was drafting a comprehensive reform plan to tackle Lebanon’s electricity sector. Earlier this month, the government approved the plan that aims to boost generation capacity while reducing state subsidies that have led to one of the world’s heaviest public debt burdens.

A diplomatic source told Asharq Al-Awsat that Le Drian will hold frank talks with Lebanese officials on the CEDRE pledges.

The US sanctions on Iran will also figure in his discussions. Diplomatic information from Beirut revealed that Macron had urged his American counterpart, Donald Trump, to “take into consideration” the situation in Lebanon in regards to the sanctions.

Macron warned that the sanctions may have a “counter-effect and force Lebanese political forces that are opposed to Hezbollah to shift stances and support the party” to confront the sanctions and their impact on the country.

He stressed the need to take into account the “uniqueness and diversity of Lebanese society and approach its problems with diligence.”



More Than 1,000 People Have Been Killed in Gaza During Ceasefire, Health Ministry Says

A boy sweeps through the rubble of a building that was destroyed following Israeli bombardment after an evacuation order, at the Maghazi camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on June 12, 2026. (AFP)
A boy sweeps through the rubble of a building that was destroyed following Israeli bombardment after an evacuation order, at the Maghazi camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on June 12, 2026. (AFP)
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More Than 1,000 People Have Been Killed in Gaza During Ceasefire, Health Ministry Says

A boy sweeps through the rubble of a building that was destroyed following Israeli bombardment after an evacuation order, at the Maghazi camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on June 12, 2026. (AFP)
A boy sweeps through the rubble of a building that was destroyed following Israeli bombardment after an evacuation order, at the Maghazi camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on June 12, 2026. (AFP)

Israeli operations in the Gaza Strip have killed 1,005 Palestinians since a ceasefire was reached between Israel and the Hamas group last October, the Gaza Health Ministry said on Wednesday.

The enclave has seen near-daily strikes, as well as shelling and gunfire along the boundary that divides Gaza into Israeli and Palestinian-controlled zones. The most recent deaths were recorded after a series of Israeli drone strikes in the past few days on towns and refugee camps in central Gaza and Gaza City.

Israel has said it is continuing to operate against Hamas and allied fighters in Gaza and has expanded the amount of territory it controls inside the strip.

In a statement Wednesday, the Israeli military said that it killed two fighters from Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in strikes over the weekend.

Gaza’s Health Ministry on Sunday said the death toll from the Israel-Hamas war had surpassed 73,000 in Gaza. The ministry does not differentiate between civilians and combatants. It is staffed by medical professionals and maintains detailed records viewed as generally reliable by the international community.


Israel Approves Settler Building Plans in Palestinian West Bank City

 Israeli soldiers stand by as Palestinian women look on as Israeli bulldozers demolish a Palestinian home, which the Israeli authorities say was built without permission, in Ar-Rifaiyya village, south of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank city of Hebron on June 17, 2026. (AFP)
Israeli soldiers stand by as Palestinian women look on as Israeli bulldozers demolish a Palestinian home, which the Israeli authorities say was built without permission, in Ar-Rifaiyya village, south of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank city of Hebron on June 17, 2026. (AFP)
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Israel Approves Settler Building Plans in Palestinian West Bank City

 Israeli soldiers stand by as Palestinian women look on as Israeli bulldozers demolish a Palestinian home, which the Israeli authorities say was built without permission, in Ar-Rifaiyya village, south of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank city of Hebron on June 17, 2026. (AFP)
Israeli soldiers stand by as Palestinian women look on as Israeli bulldozers demolish a Palestinian home, which the Israeli authorities say was built without permission, in Ar-Rifaiyya village, south of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank city of Hebron on June 17, 2026. (AFP)

Israel on Wednesday approved the expansion of a Jewish school for settlers living in the center of the Palestinian city of Hebron in the occupied West Bank, in a construction push that Palestinians say violates a decades-old agreement.

Israel's finance minister announced the plans a day after saying he had scrapped a deal that gave the Palestinian municipality control over certain planning and construction around Hebron's historic core, home to ‌a flashpoint holy ‌shrine.

The enclave around the Cave ‌of ⁠the Patriarchs - revered ⁠by Muslims, Jews and Christians - is home to more than 1,000 Jewish settlers who live among tens of thousands of Palestinians under complete Israeli security control.

Under the 1997 Hebron Agreement, Israeli troops remain deployed in the area, but construction has generally required approval from the Palestinian ⁠municipality, including around the shrine.

The religious heritage of ‌the city has made ‌it a focal point for Israeli settlers, who are determined ‌to expand the Jewish presence.

Bezalal Smotrich, Israel's far-right finance ‌minister, said construction of a 1,000 square meter building for a Jewish school in Hebron's historic core had been approved.

"We are continuing to build the Land of Israel in ‌practice and to implement practical sovereignty in the settlements," Smotrich, who has said he wants ⁠to bury ⁠the idea of Palestinian statehood, said in a statement.

Issa Amro, a Palestinian activist who lives in Hebron, said he feared Israel's dismantling of parts of the Hebron Agreement would leave Palestinian residents of the city without basic services.

He said that move was aimed at making life miserable for Palestinians and forcing them to leave.

"It means ethnic cleansing of Palestinian families from their homes, and more displacement," he said, describing Israel's actions as stealing Palestinian dreams to have a state "and to live without violence, without fear, with peace".


Palestinian Official: Israeli Settlers Torched West Bank Mosque

A Palestinian man inspects the damage inside a mosque burnt by Israeli settlers over night, in the Israeli occupied West Bank village of Jiljlia, just north of the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 17, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP) /
A Palestinian man inspects the damage inside a mosque burnt by Israeli settlers over night, in the Israeli occupied West Bank village of Jiljlia, just north of the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 17, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP) /
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Palestinian Official: Israeli Settlers Torched West Bank Mosque

A Palestinian man inspects the damage inside a mosque burnt by Israeli settlers over night, in the Israeli occupied West Bank village of Jiljlia, just north of the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 17, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP) /
A Palestinian man inspects the damage inside a mosque burnt by Israeli settlers over night, in the Israeli occupied West Bank village of Jiljlia, just north of the West Bank city of Ramallah on June 17, 2026. (Photo by ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP) /

Israeli settlers set fire to a mosque in a West Bank village on Wednesday, the local mayor said, while AFP journalists at the site saw signs of arson and vandalism.

The incident comes amid an increase in attacks against Palestinian communities by settlers in the Israeli-occupied West Bank since the start of the Gaza war in 2023.

Osama Abdullah, head of the village council in Jiljiliya, north of Ramallah, told AFP that "settlers set fire to the ablution room, caused damage to the village's main mosque, and scrawled hostile slogans on the outer walls.”

Israel's military did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.

AFP journalists who visited the mosque on Wednesday reported that the ceiling, walls and floors were blackened by smoke and flames.

They said graffiti in Hebrew had been scrawled on the walls, including some reading "vengeance" and "hi from the Hilltop Youth.”

The Hilltop Youth are a group of Israelis in the West Bank who are regularly accused of violence towards Palestinians they seek to evict from areas they wish to take over.

Mayor Abdullah said settlers arrived to burn down the mosque between 2am and 3am but found its door was locked, so instead set fire to a room dedicated to ablutions on a lower floor.

He said Palestinian civil defense crews, along with young men from the village and neighboring areas, extinguished the blaze.