Hezbollah Calls For Sensure of Foreign Media For Israeli Army Tour to Lebanese Village

Hezbollah called on the Lebanese Ministry of Information, National Media Council, and the Lebanese judicial and security agencies to take the necessary legal measures against a number of foreign media outlets operating in Lebanon.

In a statement by the party’s Media Relations Department, Monday, it explained that the Israeli occupation army organized a tour in one of the southern villages for a number of journalists working for the BBC, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, The Telegraph, Fox News, Reuters, the New York Times, and other foreign media outlets.

Hezbollah considered these media outlets which “insolently sent press teams that entered one of the southern villages accompanied by the occupation army,” as “violating the sanctity of Lebanese territory, Lebanese sovereignty, and applicable Lebanese laws.”

The party stressed its “our condemnation of this dangerous behavior and unacceptable step, and we reiterate our demand that the competent authorities take the necessary legal and political measures” against these outlets.

The Lebanese authorities announced at the end of last week the arrest of American journalist named Joshua Tartakovsky, who came to cover the events of the war in Lebanon, on charges of spying for the occupation, and he was arrested while he was wandering in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

Media outlets confirmed that Tartakovsky arrived in Lebanon about two weeks before his arrest, under the guise of a journalist, and an Israeli passport was found upon him after he was searched, and after his arrest, he was deported from Lebanon to the United States according to Quds Press.

Since September 23, the Israeli occupation forces expanded the scope of the genocide from  Gaza to include several areas of Lebanon, including the capital Beirut, through air strikes of unprecedented violence and intensity, and they also began a ground incursions into the south, disregarding international warnings and UN resolutions.

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White House ‘Horrified’ of Burning Bodies in Tent

Gruesome videos and pictures appearing to depict displaced Palestinian civilians burning alive in the aftermath of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza are both “horrifying” and “deeply disturbing,” the White House said Monday. 

A National Security Council spokesperson told Anadolu on condition of anonymity that the White House “made our concerns clear to the Israeli government” after seeing the graphic imagery.

“Israel has a responsibility to do more to avoid civilian casualties — and what happened here is horrifying, even if Hamas was operating near the hospital in an attempt to use civilians as human shields,” the spokesperson said.

Four people were killed and 40 others were injured when Israeli warplanes hit a courtyard at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gazan city of Deir al-Balah Sunday night, burning dozens of tents as displaced Palestinians slept.

Medical teams evacuated several injured individuals, including women and children, whose clothes were set ablaze by the explosion.

The victims suffered severe burns, with some bodies charred beyond recognition. Most of the injured sustained second and third-degree burns, eyewitnesses told Anadolu. They also reported that the fire spread rapidly due to the flammable nylon and fabric materials used in the tents.

According to a written statement from the government media office in Gaza, this was the Israeli army’s seventh attack targeting the tents of displaced civilians at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital. Israel had previously bombed tents at that site on Jan. 10, March 13, July 22, Aug. 4, and Sept. 27.

Israel has waged a sweeping offensive on Gaza following a Hamas-led cross-border attack on Oct. 7, 2023 that killed nearly 1,200 people, according to Israeli figures. More than 42,200 people have since been killed in Gaza, mostly women and children, and over 98,400 have been injured, according to Gaza health authorities.

Nearly all of Gaza’s population has been displaced by the war amid ongoing Israeli restrictions on the entry of international assistance that has led to acute shortages of food, clean water, and medicine.

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