Israeli Planes Bombard Civilian Areas in Lebanon

The Israeli army’s escalated military attacks against civilians and residential areas in Lebanon, particularly in the South and Bekaa regions, along with the issuance of evacuation orders, raising alarm in the region. Urgent international intervention is required to prevent the massacres and other atrocities being carried out by Israel in the Gaza Strip for more than 11 months from occurring in Lebanon as well.

Israel’s army carried out over 330 raids in over 117 Lebanese towns and cities today, 23 September 2024, according to the Euro-Med Monitor field team. These raids were directed towards civilian residential areas in southern Lebanon and various areas of the Bekaa region. As a result, 274 people—including 21 children—have been killed and over 1,024 individuals—including women, children, and paramedics—have been injured as of the early afternoon hours. As of the time of writing, Israeli airstrikes are still in progress, with the frequency of shelling attacks on residential areas rising.

In both the Gaza Strip and Lebanon, the Israeli army deliberately denies civilians enough time to escape the areas being bombed, offering them no real protection from the dangers arising from military operations. Instead, Israel randomly and directly targets civilian buildings, including the buildings of surrounding hospitals and schools.

For instance, the inhabitants of Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, which spans an area of about 4,429 square kilometres, were given just two hours to evacuate when the Israeli army issued evacuation orders. However, it would take many citizens at least three hours to leave areas within the valley. Moreover, the Israeli army neglected to designate safe zones to which people could escape—just as it has been doing in the Gaza Strip—showing that Israel either ignores the legal obligation to direct people to safe zones, or targets areas it has designated as safe. Since Israel began bombing Lebanon, dangerous conditions as well as significant challenges to the evacuation process have been documented.

The Israeli army is required by international humanitarian law to take all reasonable measures prior to any military attack in order to prevent, or at the very least reduce, harm to civilians and civilian property. This entails, among other things, providing the civilian populace with a sufficient amount of warning prior to the commencement of the attack; allowing them enough time to flee; and, unless circumstances dictate otherwise, enabling them to take protective action and relocate to safe areas.

International humanitarian law states that civilians who are unable or unwilling to leave an area are still protected as civilians, and that Israel is still obligated to protect them to the extent that they need to be shielded from harm simply because of their presence in the area.

In addition to towns in the Bekaa Valley, the Israeli army struck over 117 towns in the south of Lebanon, including some that saw serial and repeated raids, like Aitaroun, Ansar, Kfar Reman, Haris, Sarafand, and other villages in the districts of Tyre, Sidon, and Nabatieh. The Israeli army also announced that it had begun a third wave of raids and aggression against Lebanon.

Israel also used drones to light fires in southern Lebanon’s forests at the same time as it conducted warplane strikes, suggesting that Israel has been burning agricultural lands with white phosphorus—a weapon that is prohibited by international law due to the severity of burns it can cause. These burns often reach the bones of victims, and the severe fires caused by white phosphorus can destroy property, buildings, crops, and soil. It is likely that the Israeli military has been using white phosphorus in its attacks on Lebanon since its first attack on the country following the start of its genocidal war in the Gaza Strip on 8 October 2023.

Today’s military build-up in Lebanon follows an Israeli army raid on Friday 20 September 2024 into Beirut’s southern suburbs. The raid caused the collapse of two residential buildings, killing over 37 people—including children—and leaving more bodies trapped under the rubble, with the search for victims still ongoing.

Israeli forces launched a random and illegal attack on Lebanon earlier, on 17 September 2024, using radio and pager explosions. The attacks resulted in at least 32 fatalities, including two children as well as medical staff members, and 3,250 injuries, including to a diplomat. There were 200 cases of critical injuries, and 500 serious injuries to the eyes and limbs specifically.

All of the aforementioned Israeli attacks are grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, the Additional Protocol, and international humanitarian law in general. These treaties require warring parties to always distinguish between civilians and combatants and offer special protection to vulnerable populations like journalists and the elderly, in addition to providing special protection to women and children. The Fourth Geneva Convention on the Protection of Civilians, its regulations, the Fourth Hague Convention, and Article 48 of the First Additional Protocol all attest to this; customary rules of international humanitarian law also support this.

International humanitarian law also prohibits indiscriminate attacks that do not distinguish between military and civilian targets, including attacks that do not target specific military objectives or that use combat means or methods incapable of being directed at a specific military objective.

The international community must act swiftly to stop Israel from repeating its genocide in the Gaza Strip in Lebanon, by safeguarding Lebanese civilians and stopping the situation from deteriorating further. Additionally, effective sanctions must be placed on Israel, such as a complete ban on arms exports, and Israel must be cut off from all forms of political, intelligence, and financial support. Finally, Israel must be held responsible for its ongoing crimes against peoples that occur on their own territory.

EuroMed Human Rights Monitor

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A ‘War Day’ in The Life of Haifa

CROSSFIREARABIA – Sirens in Haifa. its surroundings areas and in the north of Israel have been going off all day, Monday, because of continuing missiles coming all the way from southern Lebanon.

Israeli media reports say the sirens are bellowing hard in the center of the city that doesn’t rest these days, either night or day. Eyewitness reports describe the incoming missiles as “heavy” while people scurrying in the streets looking for safe areas to hide.

It was a tough day, Monday, as described with at least 165 rockets being launched into different parts of Israel.

This is the first time since 2006 since Hezbollah launched direct hits on Haifa with rattled people – estimated at 300,000 – quickly going to underground shelters. At least 30 rockets hit the city at different times triggering the sirens and panic among people with many registering for therapy these days.

One of the areas hit was Kiryat Tivon to the southeast and surprisingly in the middle of the Haifa’s prestigious Technion Institute where a number of rockets from the north landed as part of a large-scale missile launch to reach all part of the country including Tiberias and Safad as estimated by the operations unit of the Israeli army.

With the rockets coming in sharp thuds, the fires in the different northern parts of Israel like Ein Zeitim have raged on, keeping the fire engines busy.

The strikes have been part of wider military launches from southern Lebanon including to Acca, Upper Galilee and Lower Galilee while missiles reaching to the occupied West Bank, about 120 kilometers from the Lebanese border.

This is the first long stretch of rocket launches and show that Hezbollah has a lot of missiles in their storerooms despite the Israeli claims that 50 percent of their military hardware have been destroyed.

But the city of Haifa has been under bombardment since early this week with the Ramat David Airbase and other sensitive sites being under attack and hit for a second time on Sunday, which means that nervousness among the people and workers continue.

Hezbollah rockets also landed on the Israeli Rafael Advanced Defense Systems military-industrial complex, which specializes in electronic warfare, using the-now-becoming-famous Fadi-I, Fadi-II and Katyusha rocket weapons. 

The complex lies to the north of Haifa and is supposed to be the pride of Israeli military industrial ingenuity but for how long many wounder.

A settler from Kiryat Bialik, north of Haifa, told Maariv: “We have never seen anything like this before, not even in 2006. We all assumed that there would be a response from Hezbollah, but we did not think it would be this strong, especially when there is Iron Dome, which is supposed to protect us.”

Talk of the Iron Dome these days, seems to be a dead duck affair since it is woefully failing to intercept many of the missiles that seems to be flying into Israeli airspace whether from Hezbollah, the Houthis of Yemen and the Islamist groups in Iraq.

But elation is not expected in this war for the Israeli army is fighting back and doing damage. On Monday evening, Lebanese Health Minister Firas Al Abiad announced 274 people were killed and 1024 injured in what the Israeli army said over 1000 air raids into Lebanon.

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Israeli Warplanes Target Beirut

An Israel airstrike targets the southern district of Beirut. Israeli warplanes have been targeting Hezbollah positions since Monday morning.

The Israeli army states it targeted a total of 11,000 Hizbollah positions all around the country according to Israel’s Channel 14.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant claims Israel destroyed what Hezbollah built in 20 years.

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Hezbollah Attacks Major Complex in Haifa

Lebanese group Hezbollah fired rockets at an Israeli military industrial complex in Haifa on Monday, marking the second attack on the northern city since the current conflict began last 7 October, 2023.

The group said dozens of rockets were launched at Rafael Electronics Company north of Haifa, as well as the reserve headquarters of the Northern Corps and logistics base of the Galilee Formation in the Ami’ad camp.

Israeli Channel 13 reported that five illegal settlers sustained minor injuries from shrapnel after rockets were fired from Lebanon toward northern Israel.

This was the second time Hezbollah targeted military sites in Haifa, having previously fired missiles at the city on Sunday.

The rocket fire came as at least 100 people were killed and more than 400 others injured, including children, women and medics, in intensive Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon since Monday morning, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry.

The Israeli army confirmed that its warplanes struck more than 300 targets across Lebanon this morning.

Tension has mounted between Hezbollah and Israel following a deadly airstrike on Friday that killed at least 45 people, including children and women, and injured dozens in Beirut’s southern suburb.

Hezbollah confirmed that at least 16 of its members, including senior leader Ibrahim Aqil and top commander Ahmed Wahbi, were killed in the Israeli strike.

The attack came days after at least 37 people were killed and over 3,000 others injured in two waves of wireless communication device explosions across Lebanon according to Anadolu, the Turkish news agency.

While the Lebanese government and Hezbollah blame Israel for the explosions, Tel Aviv has not denied or confirmed its involvement.

Hezbollah and Israel have been engaged in cross-border warfare since the start of the Israeli war on Gaza, which has killed over 41,400 people, mostly women and children, following a cross-border attack by Hamas on 7 October last year.

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