Algeria Starts Inoculations after Receiving 1st Batch of COVID-19 Vaccine

A worker wearing a protective suit disinfects a bus station, following the outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Algiers, Algeria March 16, 2020. Ramzi Boudina, Reuters
A worker wearing a protective suit disinfects a bus station, following the outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Algiers, Algeria March 16, 2020. Ramzi Boudina, Reuters
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Algeria Starts Inoculations after Receiving 1st Batch of COVID-19 Vaccine

A worker wearing a protective suit disinfects a bus station, following the outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Algiers, Algeria March 16, 2020. Ramzi Boudina, Reuters
A worker wearing a protective suit disinfects a bus station, following the outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Algiers, Algeria March 16, 2020. Ramzi Boudina, Reuters

Algeria symbolically launched its COVID-19 vaccination campaign on Saturday in the town where the country's first case of infection with the coronavirus was confirmed in March.

A 65-year-old retiree got the first shot of Russia’s Sputnik-V vaccine at a hospital in the town of Blida, about 40 kilometers southwest of the capital, Algiers, in the presence of health authorities.

“All measures have been taken to ensure a good rollout of the vaccination campaign on the national territory,” Health Minister Abderrahmane Benbouzid said.

Vaccines will start being administered in all regions of the country on Sunday. The campaign is set to start with health care workers, the elderly and other vulnerable populations.

Algeria received its first shipment of vaccines Friday at the Boufarik military airport, west of Algiers. Authorities did not indicate how many arrived, though the government had said it had ordered a first batch of 500,000 doses.

The government said it is also negotiating acquisition of the AstraZeneca vaccine.

Algeria has lost at least 2,884 lives to the coronavirus pandemic and confirmed more than 106,000 cases.



Lebanon Asserts Itself at Israel Negotiations, Undermining Hezbollah and Iran

Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)
Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)
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Lebanon Asserts Itself at Israel Negotiations, Undermining Hezbollah and Iran

Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)
Rescuers work at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)

Lebanon is set to enter direct negotiations with Israel for the first time, marking a fundamental shift in how the state manages the conflict and underscoring its insistence on sovereign decision-making free of external tutelage.

The shift follows Iranian attempts to preserve what is known as the “unity arenas” in talks due to be held in Pakistan, against firm Lebanese insistence, voiced by President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, that the Lebanese state alone is authorized to negotiate on Lebanon’s behalf.

The talks carry added weight as they come after a series of pivotal state decisions, most notably banning Hezbollah’s military wing and operations and restricting weapons in Beirut to legitimate forces. They also follow steps rejecting Iranian interference in Lebanon, the latest being the expulsion of the Iranian ambassador.

These moves intersect directly with calls to disarm Hezbollah, an issue set to dominate the negotiations, especially as Israel moves to link any withdrawal from southern Lebanon to tangible progress on that front.

The developments have angered Hezbollah. Officials and supporters have sharply criticized the move, going so far as to accuse Prime Minister Nawaf Salam of treason.

Hezbollah supporters also staged a protest against Salam on Thursday and Friday after the government decided to make Beirut a demilitarized city.

Blow to Hezbollah

Lebanese Forces MP Razi El Hage said Hezbollah had bet on Lebanon being included in a ceasefire deal between the United States and Iran, allowing it to declare what he described as a false victory and use it to pressure the government to reverse its decisions.

He said the state is now more serious than ever about imposing monopoly over arms.

People with an image of slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah gather as rescuers with heavy machinery work at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)

Political analyst Ali al-Amine said Hezbollah has long sought to turn political and military developments into what appears to be victory, even if illusory, relying on an organized propaganda machine and its influence over its support base.

“Had a ceasefire in Lebanon coincided with a truce involving Iran, the party would have rushed to declare a divine victory and stage celebrations,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

But recent developments have undercut that approach, he added. Continued Israeli strikes coincided with the Lebanese state taking action, weakening Hezbollah’s ability to exploit developments in its favor, he explained.

He pointed to Salam’s initiative and Aoun’s efforts to cement the principle that the Lebanese state alone negotiates on behalf of Lebanon, a shift that has angered Hezbollah.

Hezbollah’s problem is exclusion

Al-Amine said Hezbollah’s core problem is not with the negotiations themselves. The party has long taken part in them through Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, including during maritime border talks.

“The issue now is that it no longer leads or monopolizes this track, nor does Iran behind it,” he said.

He added that Salam’s clear statement that Lebanon negotiates for itself, followed by Aoun’s backing, marked a turning point. Hezbollah responded with a political campaign that went as far as accusing Salam of being “Zionist.”

Israel’s announcement that it is ready to negotiate deepened the shock, he said, not because of the talks themselves but because the initiative had slipped from Hezbollah’s hands.

Women gesture while looking out from a window of a damaged building at the site of an Israeli strike carried out on Wednesday, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 10, 2026. (Reuters)

Al-Amine also pointed to a shift in the US approach, with no back channels opened with Hezbollah and clear support instead for the Lebanese government as the sole negotiating party.

Test for the state

As the outcome of the talks remains uncertain, al-Amine said the next phase hinges on the Lebanese state, particularly Salam and Aoun, taking practical steps to strengthen its position.

Chief among these is implementing the decision to make Beirut a demilitarized city, a key step toward restoring state authority and institutions, he said, noting that success will require serious Arab and international backing.

Hage said the negotiations mark a step forward and will focus on one central issue, the state’s ability to guarantee exclusive control over arms.

He added that Lebanese Forces ministers had submitted a memorandum to the Cabinet outlining a clear legal and political path to exit the current crisis, hold those responsible to account, and pursue Iran in international forums over the losses caused by Hezbollah dragging Lebanon to the war.


Lebanon Between 2026 War and Negotiation Talks Next Week

Residents search for belongings in the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike in the Ain el-Mreisseh area of Beirut (Reuters)
Residents search for belongings in the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike in the Ain el-Mreisseh area of Beirut (Reuters)
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Lebanon Between 2026 War and Negotiation Talks Next Week

Residents search for belongings in the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike in the Ain el-Mreisseh area of Beirut (Reuters)
Residents search for belongings in the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike in the Ain el-Mreisseh area of Beirut (Reuters)

Lebanon, under sustained Israeli air strikes and an open war, is entering a pivotal week as it prepares for preliminary meetings expected next week that could open a new negotiating track to secure a ceasefire, stabilize the border, and regulate the south.

The move brings Lebanese-Israeli negotiations back into focus, not as a precedent, but as a continuation of a path shaped by wars and facts on the ground.

The key shift lies in the form. Most past negotiations were indirect, conducted through the United Nations, international mediators, or technical committees. Lebanon has seen only one formal round of direct negotiations at this level, the May 17, 1983, agreement. That makes the 2026 track, in form, the closest parallel, though it differs sharply in context, conditions, and aims.

From armistice to border demarcation: indirect track

Negotiations between Lebanon and Israel began with the 1949 Armistice Agreement, signed in Naqoura after the 1948 war and the Lebanese army’s participation in the al-Malikiyyah battle.

It established a ceasefire, adopted the armistice line based on international borders, and set up a joint committee under UN supervision.

Since then, all frameworks, except the 1983 deal, have stayed within indirect or technical formats.

In April 1996, Israel’s “Grapes of Wrath” operation and the Qana massacre led to the April Understanding, which barred targeting civilians. It set up a monitoring committee including Lebanon, Israel, the US, France, and Syria, helping curb escalation until Israel’s withdrawal from the south in 2000.

After the 2006 war, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701 set the international framework for the southern border, including a halt to hostilities, deployment of the Lebanese army south of the Litani River, expansion of UNIFIL, and restricting weapons in the area to the state.

In 2022, US-mediated indirect talks on maritime borders ended with the adoption of Line 23 and recognition of Lebanon’s right to develop the Qana field, seen as a model for technical, non-political negotiation.

In November 2024, border escalation produced a fragile ceasefire that included partial Israeli withdrawal from some points, expanded Lebanese army deployment south of the Litani, and a halt to hostilities. Repeated violations and weak implementation exposed its limits, prompting calls for a stricter mechanism.

“Mechanism”: toward direct engagement

In 2025, the term “mechanism” emerged as a practical framework to anchor a ceasefire. The proposal centers on a five-party committee including Lebanon, Israel, the US, France, and the United Nations, backed by technical and field monitoring.

Lebanon insists the Lebanese army alone must implement any arrangements on its territory, rejecting any Israeli operational role on the ground.

This marks the core shift. Unlike previous talks, which were indirect or technical, the 2026 meetings are set to be direct or semi-direct, making them the second such test after May 17.

Second time since 1983

Former MP Fares Soaid said Lebanon is entering “the second instance of formal direct negotiations with Israel,” after the first, which followed the 1982 invasion, when President Amine Gemayel pursued talks to secure Israeli withdrawal and reach an understanding.

He said 1983 unfolded under vastly different conditions. “The obstacles were enormous. The Cold War shaped the scene, and the Soviet Union, led by Yuri Andropov, opposed any track that could pull Lebanon fully into the US camp,” he said.

Arab capitals, led by Damascus under Hafez al-Assad, were not supportive, and Lebanese public opinion, especially among Muslims, was not ready, he added.

Although the May 17 agreement won majority backing in parliament, Damascus, aligned with the Soviet camp, mobilized local forces, leading to the February 6 uprising and the collapse of the deal, effectively besieging Gemayel in Baabda, Soaid said.

He said 2026 presents a different landscape. “There is no Soviet veto, the international climate is more positive, and Arab and Islamic positions are more open to negotiations,” he said.

“There is no objection from Damascus and no real internal opposition. The negotiating delegation is expected to be formed in line with the constitution and presidential powers,” he added, saying the chances of success are far higher than in 1983.

Negotiation is not normalization

A Lebanese parliamentary source said conflating negotiation with normalization has no legal or political basis, stressing that talks do not amount to diplomatic recognition or normal relations.

Lebanon has repeatedly negotiated, from the armistice to the April Understanding and the maritime demarcation, without changing its legal or political stance toward Israel, the source said.

“Negotiation is a political decision governed by international law and the Vienna and Geneva conventions,” the source said, adding that legal doctrine does not treat negotiation as recognition.

Lebanon has used multiple formats, from separate rooms to technical committees, all confined to specific files tied to security, borders, and sovereignty.

“The issue is not the form, but the substance,” the source said. “If the goal is to stabilize borders, stop violations, and restore sovereignty, that falls within the core duties of the Lebanese state.”


Israel Adopts Phased Approach to Lebanon Negotiations

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House (file photo, dpa)
US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House (file photo, dpa)
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Israel Adopts Phased Approach to Lebanon Negotiations

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House (file photo, dpa)
US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House (file photo, dpa)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had opted for a gradual approach in negotiations with Lebanon, sources close to Netanyahu said on Friday.

This means that Israel will start with technical and procedural issues before moving to major files, depending on the trajectory of US-Iran talks that began in Pakistan.

The sources cited by Maariv said Netanyahu chose a relatively junior official to handle the file, Israel’s ambassador to Washington, Yechiel Leiter, after initially planning to appoint his close adviser, Ron Dermer.

They said Dermer disagreed with Netanyahu’s approach. He argued Israel should agree to a ceasefire on the Lebanese front to allow the Islamabad talks to proceed without disruption.

In discussions with US envoy Steve Witkoff, he concluded that the continued war with Lebanon was undermining negotiations with Iran and could give Tehran grounds to trigger a crisis that prolongs the talks.

That would in turn harm President Donald Trump, who faces mounting domestic pressure to prevent a return to war.

Dermer, who manages US-Israeli dialogue, believes Trump’s opponents are exploiting the war politically, accusing him of being pulled behind Netanyahu and his personal and partisan interests at the expense of US interests, damaging Israel’s standing in the US.

The Israeli military, however, opposes ending the war with Lebanon and insists negotiations proceed under fire. The stance reflects a public perception that operations have not met their objectives, alongside anger over continued shelling from Lebanon. The fire has expanded into southern Israel and, while causing limited physical damage, has spread panic and reinforced calls to press on.

A poll published Friday showed 79% of Israelis oppose halting the war before Hezbollah is dismantled and disarmed.

Netanyahu has aligned himself with the military, leaving Dermer in a difficult position as both seek a formula that would satisfy Washington.

Katz said Hezbollah is “pleading for a ceasefire, and its Iranian patrons are also applying pressure and issuing threats, out of serious concern that Israel will crush Hezbollah.”

Boaz Bismuth, head of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, said the war could resume in the “coming days,” describing the current ceasefire as a temporary arrangement.

Seeking to reassure the public, especially in the north where rocket fire is heaviest, Katz said the “massive and unprecedented attack on Lebanon” had dealt Hezbollah a severe blow, leaving it “stunned and confused” due to the depth and scale of the strikes.

He said the “separation of fronts” agreement, led by Netanyahu, was a key achievement that allows Israel to act forcefully against Hezbollah under an organized plan, with forces ready to escalate if Iran opens fire.

Katz said the plan rests on four lines: the border line, including the destruction of homes in Lebanese border villages, a defense line inside Lebanon expanded from five to 15 points, an anti-tank defense line secured through ongoing ground operations, and the Litani line, which Israeli forces aim to control to prevent infiltration and block residents from returning south.

He added the military would also launch a powerful air campaign, modeled on operations against Iran, targeting operatives and rocket launch sites in the Litani area and across Lebanon outside it.

Israeli military chief Eyal Zamir approved additional plans to expand the war and ground operations in Lebanon after touring and assessing the situation near Bint Jbeil on Thursday.

“Our main combat arena is here in Lebanon. The objective defined for you is the removal of the direct threat to the residents of the north, which you are carrying out with determination,” Zamir said to troops, according to remarks published by the army.

He said the army remained at war, deepening ground operations and striking Hezbollah hard.

“This is a very powerful operation, and our forces are on the front lines and in depth,” he said. He added that strikes on Iran were also affecting Hezbollah, which he said had become isolated inside Lebanon and cut off from its “strategic artery” in Iran.

“The Lebanese government now understands more than ever the scale of the problem posed by the presence of a radical extremist terrorist organization on its territory,” he said.