[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

- Palestine territory within a Israel state which is still not a signatory.
Literally what are you talking about

- Netanyahu himself wasn't in said jurisdiction in Palestine (or at least he didn't make it apparent), unless we're just vicariously linking back to him actions done by subordinates who were...
Neither was Putin ever in Ukrainian territory, nor Sinwar or Deif in Israeli territory, yet that never stopped the ICC from demanding prosecution for the war crimes that were committed under them.

I swear, the pretzels people twist themselves into to defend a universally-disliked cynical and egotistical maniac just because he's the head of their favourite apartheid state...
 
No doubt, but not quite as edgelord as Israelis posting their war crimes on Instagram. It's clear who the real evil is in the region.
I still think they're both evil. 10/7 is as evil as it gets, both those radical Jew colonists are very evil as well. 10/7 was a stupid response to the colonists, IDF clearing anything related to Hamas/Hezbollah/Iran seems very natural reaction. I wonder if Mexico City might turn to glass if Mexico ever pulled something like this against the USA, pulling the strings on drug cartels to cause some 10/7s near the border?
 
I still think they're both evil. 10/7 is as evil as it gets, both those radical Jew colonists are very evil as well. 10/7 was a stupid response to the colonists, IDF clearing anything related to Hamas/Hezbollah/Iran seems very natural reaction. I wonder if Mexico City might turn to glass if Mexico ever pulled something like this against the USA, pulling the strings on drug cartels to cause some 10/7s near the border?
no
 
Literally what are you talking about


Neither was Putin ever in Ukrainian territory, nor Sinwar or Deif in Israeli territory, yet that never stopped the ICC from demanding prosecution for the war crimes that were committed under them.

I swear, the pretzels people twist themselves into to defend a universally-disliked cynical and egotistical maniac just because he's the head of their favourite apartheid state...

well that's kinda my point thus far: as those persons do (or did) not reside where the ICC has any jurisdiction, the possibility of any enforcement largely leaves the ICC proceedings to be done in absentia. If ever. Unless, that is, someone seriously thinks those persons could be actually arrested. Which I do not. The result is relegating their status to mere persona non grata and limits the possibility of them traveling for fear of being arrested. Which I presume is one viable strategy, if only a political one. But upon their being isolated, and thus any diplomatic ties being severed (as anyone meeting with them could be charged as some accessory to a crime), then who would be able to convince them from doing anything even more rash and aggressive in the future?
 
well that's kinda my point thus far: as those persons do (or did) not reside where the ICC has any jurisdiction, the possibility of any enforcement largely leaves the ICC proceedings to be done in absentia. If ever. Unless, that is, someone seriously thinks those persons could be actually arrested. Which I do not. The result is relegating their status to mere persona non grata and limits the possibility of them traveling for fear of being arrested. Which I presume is one viable strategy, if only a political one. But upon their being isolated, and thus any diplomatic ties being severed (as anyone meeting with them could be charged as some accessory to a crime), then who would be able to convince them from doing anything even more rash and aggressive in the future?
"what if this ruling by the ICC made bad people do more and worse bad things"

Well I guess that'd be on the US or any other country with material leverage to actually do something then. It wouldn't be on the ICC at all, and the tortured attempting at putting it on the ICC doesn't hold any water.
 
Well I guess that'd be on the US or any other country with material leverage to actually do something then.

Which means you'd need someone to put leverage on the US.

Eu won't do it, Russia's too poor, but China's got all the industry. It would have to be them to leverage sanctions against the USA by limiting American corporate access to sell products/services/IP in China or perhaps nationalize corporations like Foxxcon which manufacture most iPhones until the US administration bans all shipments of weapons aid to Israel.

Though China probably won't only because they're weak right now ever since the Evergrand thing happened to them. So they won't risk a trade war with the US. Which is unfortunate so I guess the war will go on till the last Israeli soldier or Palestinian soldier is ground to dust. Cause really China is the only power on the planet that has leverage against the US let's be honest.
 

Israel and Lebanon close to ceasefire deal​

Israel and Lebanon appear to be close to a ceasefire deal, with the Israeli cabinet set to meet on Tuesday to discuss it, Israeli and US officials say.
A 60-day truce is being proposed to end fighting between Israel and the Iranian-backed Lebanese militia Hezbollah.
It is said to include the withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon and an end to the Hezbollah presence in the area.
It is often said that the darkest hour is before the dawn. There has been an intensification in the exchange of fire between Israel and Hezbollah, just as the two sides haggle over the final details of the deal.

Sunday saw around 250 projectiles fired into Israel from Lebanon, with most intercepted, while the Israeli Air Force has continued to carry out air strikes on suspected Hezbollah positions and weapons stores in Beirut and elsewhere.

The deal would include an increase in the presence of the Lebanese army in the area vacated by Israel and Hezbollah, according to a Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is said to have agreed to the deal "in principle" and Lebanese deputy parliament speaker Elias Bou Saab said, quoted by Reuters, that there were now "no serious obstacles" to a ceasefire.

One major sticking point - who would monitor the truce - had been resolved, he said, with a five-country committee set up including France as a member and chaired by the US.

US White House National Security spokesman John Kirby also said that a deal was "close" and discussions were going in the right direction.

Also holding up the deal has been Israel’s insistence on its right to go back into Lebanon and take whatever military action it decides is necessary if it believes Hezbollah is moving back into southern Lebanon south of the Litani River or preparing to launch an attack on Israel.

This freedom of movement was unpalatable to both Hezbollah and the Lebanese government but Amos Hochstein, the US envoy, is believed to have made it clear, as he shuttled between the two countries, that there was a time limit on this ceasefire deal.

Concerns over how a ceasefire would be enforced, given the comparative weakness of both the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) and the Lebanese Army, appear to have been allayed.

But then there is the domestic Israeli factor. The hard right National Security Minister, Itamar Ben Gvir, has taken to social media to voice his opposition to a ceasefire deal, calling it "a grave mistake". He said that now, with Hezbollah on the back foot militarily, was "a historic opportunity" to destroy it.

The hostilities began on 8 October last year, as Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel in support of Hamas in Gaza.
Israel’s stated goal in its war against Hezbollah - which intensified in September - is to allow the return of about 60,000 residents who have been displaced from communities in northern Israel because of the group’s attacks.
It was then that it launched a major offensive against the militia, destroying much of its infrastructure and weapons, and killing its leader Hassan Nasrallah and other senior figures.
Lebanese authorities have said any ceasefire deal should be limited to the terms of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel.
The resolution includes the withdrawal of Hezbollah’s fighters and weapons in areas between the Blue Line - the unofficial frontier between Lebanon and Israel - and the Litani river, about 30km (20 miles) from the boundary with Israel.
Israel says that was never fully respected, while Lebanon says Israeli violations included military flights over Lebanese territory.
In Lebanon, more than 3,750 people have been killed and at least 15,600 injured since October 2023, according to Lebanese authorities, with more than one million forced from their homes.
Several people were injured and buildings damaged in Hezbollah's Sunday attacks on northern and central Israel, some of them near Tel Aviv, Israel's police said.
The attacks followed an Israeli air strike on central Beirut on Saturday, in which the Lebanese health ministry said 29 people were killed.
Hostilities continued on Monday, with Lebanon's health ministry saying Israeli air strikes killed at least 12 people in the south.
Israel also carried out multiple attacks on Beirut's southern suburbs, saying it was targeting buildings linked to Hezbollah.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0rge45kw4jo
 

Heavy rains, rising sea levels in Gaza sweep away displaced families, tents and belongings​

Thousands of displaced people have been affected by seasonal flooding, civil emergency service says

Just two days after taking out a loan to set up a makeshift home in a tent encampment for his family, Mohammed Kark felt water at his feet as the family was sleeping Sunday night.

"All of a sudden I saw the ocean attacking me and my kids and people screaming," he told CBC News on Monday.

Kark, who is on crutches due to a leg injury, said others rushed to help rescue his two children — ages six and seven — from the water that was sweeping away some of the seaside tent encampments in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

"We got soaked, us and our neighbours," he said.

"They took my wife and kids … I had to find our things underwater."

Kark's family was one of hundreds of families whose tents — made of plastic and cloth — were flooded and swept away by the heavy rains and rising sea levels in Khan Younis on Monday, according to eyewitnesses who spoke with CBC News. Most of the families have already been uprooted several times in the 13-month-long war between Israel and Hamas.

For many displaced Palestinians, winter conditions are destroying the few remaining items they have after more than a year of ongoing bombardment and lack of basic items, including food, clothes and medical supplies.

'God saved us but we lost everything'​

Mohammed Al-Najjar said he was released from an Israeli prison on Saturday and came to seek shelter at the beach encampment with his wife, uncle and one-year-old son.

The 25-year-old said his son was swept by the sea along with the family's belongings.

"He was so wet and sick," Al-Najjar said about his son, whom he took to get checked by a pharmacist.

"The water took all our things. The pots and plates, everything went into the ocean. There's nothing left. The [tents] were destroyed, all our wood is gone," he told CBC News.

"God saved us but we lost everything."

Mariam Abu Saqer said her daughter was also swept away by the sea.

"Thank God we were able to rescue her," she told Reuters.

"Where should we go? Wherever we go, they tell us there is no space."

Thousands affected by seasonal flooding​

Abu Ahmed Al-Arqan said he helped get women out of the affected tents all night.

"The water came in on us while we were sleeping. What can we do?" Al-Arqan said.

"We're dying … they're slaughtering us," he told CBC News, referring to ongoing bombardments that Israel says are aimed at stopping Hamas fighters from waging more attacks and regrouping across the Gaza Strip.

The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said on Monday that thousands of displaced people were affected by seasonal flooding and called for new tents and caravans from aid donors to protect them.

Many tents used early in the war have now worn out and no longer offer protection, but the price of new tents and plastic sheeting has shot up beyond the means of displaced families.

Some families at the tent encampment told CBC News they sought shelter near the beach because of overcrowding in other areas in Khan Younis.

The UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA says around half a million displaced Palestinians are at risk in areas of flooding, with the first rains of winter meaning even more suffering.

"The situation will only get worse with every drop of rain, every bomb, every strike," it said in a post on X Monday.

'Desperate situation must end,' UNRWA says​


UNRWA said families in Gaza City are entering winter in appalling conditions with nowhere safe to shelter.

"Rain is pouring down and they need everything, including clothes, shoes, blankets and mattresses, as the cold is settling in," it said in another post. "This desperate situation must end."

In another part of Khan Younis, rainwater entered a school housing displaced families. Suad Al-Sabea, a mother of six from northern Gaza who lives inside a classroom with broken windows at the school, said the rain that seeped in spoiled the flour and damaged a wood-fuelled earth oven that she uses to sell bread to make a living.

"I was scared of life or death; now we worry about the rain," she said.

"The dough drowned in water, and many mattresses drowned in water. It was raining on top of my head and I kept baking to provide for my children," Al-Sabea told Reuters on Monday.

Meanwhile, Israeli military strikes intensified across the war-torn enclave Monday. In Rafah in southern Gaza, an Israeli airstrike killed at least four people, medics said, while tanks deepened their incursions in the northern edge of two towns of Beit Hanoun, and in Beit Lahiya, and Jabalia, the largest of the enclave's eight historic refugee camps.

Medics said seven Palestinians were killed by two Israeli airstrikes in the area of Jabalia.

Israel's campaign in Gaza has killed more than 44,200 people, and uprooted nearly the entire population at least once, according to Gaza officials, while reducing wide swathes of the narrow coastal territory to rubble.

The war erupted in response to a cross-border attack by Hamas-led militants on Oct. 7, 2023 in which gunmen killed around 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-israel-rain-flood-tents-khan-younis-1.7392311
 

Gangsters block aid distribution in south Gaza​

Amid severe food shortages in Gaza, increasingly violent thefts by criminal gangs are now the main obstacle to distributing supplies in the south, aid workers and locals say.
They allege that armed men operate within plain sight of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in a restricted zone by the border.
The BBC has learnt that Hamas - sensing an opportunity to regain its faltering control - has reactivated a special security force to combat theft and banditry.

After gangsters robbed nearly 100 UN lorries, injuring many of the Palestinian drivers, on 16 November - one of the worst single losses of aid during the war - a number of alleged looters were then killed in an ambush.
A notorious Gazan criminal family then blocked the main Salah al-Din Road leading from Israel’s Kerem Shalom crossing point for two days last week.
Witnesses said iron barriers were erected and lorries trying to access the aid distribution point were fired at.
“Law and order have broken down in the area around the Kerem Shalom crossing, which remains the main entry point of goods, and gangs are filling the power vacuum,” says Sam Rose, deputy director of Unrwa, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, in Gaza.
“It’s inevitable after 13 months of intense conflict - things fall apart.”

As the rainy winter weather begins, humanitarian officials say solving the worsening situation is critical to meet the huge, deepening needs of most of Gaza’s 2.3 million population - now displaced to the centre and south.
“It is tactical, systematic, criminal looting,” says Georgios Petropoulos, head of the UN’s humanitarian office, Ocha, in Gaza.
He says this is leading to “ultra-violence” in all directions - “from the looters towards the truckers, from the IDF towards the police, and from the police towards the looters”.
There has been increased lawlessness in Gaza since Israel began targeting police officers early this year, citing their role in Hamas governance.
“Hamas’s security control dropped to under 20%,” the former head of Hamas police investigations told the BBC, adding: “We are working on a plan to restore control to 60% within a month.”
Some displaced Gazans in the south welcome the new Hamas efforts against criminal gangs.
“Killing the thieves who stole aid is a step in the right direction,” exclaims one man, Mohammed Abu Jared.
However, others see them as a cynical attempt to take control of lucrative black markets.
“Hamas is killing its competitors in stealing aid,” says Mohammed Diab, an activist in Deir al-Balah. “A big mafia has finished off a small mafia.”

Many see Hamas’s attempts to take a lead against the criminality as the direct consequence of Israels’ failure to agree on a post-war plan in Gaza.
There are currently no alternatives to replace the Islamist movement and armed group which Israeli leaders pledged to destroy after last year’s deadly 7 October attacks.
The chaos comes at a time when aid entering the Palestinian territory has dropped to some of the lowest levels since the start of the war.
While the threat of famine is greatest in besieged parts of the north where Israel is conducting a new, intense military offensive, in the south there are also major shortages of food, medicines and other goods.
“Prices of basic commodities are sky-rocketing - a bag of flour costs more than $200 (£160), a single egg $15 - or else goods are simply not available,” Sam Rose of Unrwa says.
Every day in the past week, Umm Ahmed has stood with her children in a huge queue outside a bakery in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, where ultimately some loaves are given out.
“My children are very hungry every day. We can’t afford the basics. It’s constant suffering. No food, no water, no cleaning products, nothing,” she says.
“We don’t want much, just to live a decent life. We need food. We need goods to come in and be distributed fairly. That’s all we’re asking for.”

The US has been pressing for Israel to allow more aid lorries into Gaza.
However, Israeli officials say that the main reason that their goal of 350 a day has not been reached is the inability of the UN and other international aid agencies to bring enough lorries to the crossings.
Aid workers reject that. They are urgently calling for many entry restrictions imposed by the Israeli authorities to be lifted, and for more crossing points to be opened and secured so they can collect and distribute supplies.
They say the breakdown in public order needs to be addressed and that Israel, as an occupying power, is obliged to provide protection and security.
The BBC was told that thefts often happen in clear sight of Israeli soldiers or surveillance drones - but that the army fails to intervene.
Stolen goods are apparently being stored outside or in warehouses in areas under Israeli military control.
The IDF did not respond to BBC requests for comment on how it combats organised looting and smuggling. It has previously insisted that it takes countermeasures and works to facilitate the entry of aid.

Early in the war, as food became increasingly scarce, desperate Gazans were sometimes seen stealing from incoming aid lorries.
Soon, cigarette smuggling became a huge business with gangs holding up convoys at gunpoint after they arrived from Egypt’s Rafah crossing and, after this shut in May, Kerem Shalom.
A cigarette packet can sell for exorbitant amounts in Gaza: while a packet of 20 cost about 20 shekels ($5.40) before the war, now a single cigarette can cost 180 shekels ($48.60).
Cigarettes are being found within the frames of wooden aid pallets and inside closed food cans, indicating that there is a regional racket involved in smuggling.
For the past six weeks, the Israeli authorities have banned commercial imports, arguing that these benefit Hamas.
This has added to the decrease in the supply of food, which is in turn driving the rise in armed looting.
Stolen goods, from flour to winter shelters, sent as international donations and meant to be given as free handouts to needy people can only be bought at extortionate prices on Gaza’s black market.
Meanwhile, months’ worth of donated supplies are being held back in Egypt due to hold-ups in aid delivery.
In recent days, local media reports are suggesting that Israel is now studying the option of delivering aid to Gaza by means of a private, armed American security contractor.
While nothing has yet been officially announced, aid workers are worried.
Georgios Petropoulos of Ocha questions which donor countries would want supplies distributed this way.
“How safe is it really going to be?” he asks: “I think it will be a vector for more bloodshed and violence.”
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c93qevdpzvqo
 
edit: as cited above. thank you.

Not really Gaza, but a ceasefire is commencing on the Lebanon-Israel front. Some sort of multinational force is expected to patrol and/or oversee south of the Litani River there, although the details are as yet unclear.


Under the deal, a full and permanent ceasefire would be implemented immediately. There will be 60 days permitted for the full withdrawal of Israeli forces — a gradual withdrawal to allow the Lebanese forces to mobilize and move in to secure the area, but the trigger time is immediate, set to take effect later Tuesday.

The first peel-off of Israeli troops was to begin within the next 10 days.

Hezbollah is expected to pull its forces and heavy weapons back about 20 miles from the Israeli border, to the Litani River.

Under the deal, Hezbollah will move north of the so-called Litani Line, a senior Biden administration official told reporters in a call Tuesday, while the Lebanese Armed Forces will move south of that line and take position. Hezbollah, as part of the agreement, will not be permitted to rebuild infrastructure or weaponry again in the area they vacating, the official said.

Personally I never really understood the relation between Lebanon's government and Hezbollah. Since Israel was never fighting Lebanon-proper here, and Hezbollah has been operating more or less unopposed to the south of the Litani, what motivation is there by Lebanon (whom Israel struck a deal with) to see that Hezbollah simply doesn't resume their fighting whenever they want...?

My estimation is that Joe Biden doesn't want to leave his watch with a war on his hands. This gives him an out, and time for the Israel army to rest for a brief moment.
 
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edit: as cited above. thank you.

Not really Gaza, but a ceasefire is commencing on the Lebanon-Israel front. Some sort of multinational force is expected to patrol and/or oversee south of the Litani River there, although the details are as yet unclear.




Personally I never really understood the relation between Lebanon's government and Hezbollah. Since Israel was never fighting Lebanon-proper here, and Hezbollah has been operating more or less unopposed to the south of the Litani, what motivation is there by Lebanon (whom Israel struck a deal with) to see that Hezbollah simply doesn't resume their fighting whenever they want...?

My estimation is that Joe Biden doesn't want to leave his watch with a war on his hands. This gives him and out, and time for the Israel army to rest for a brief moment.

Lebanon isn't really a functioning nation. At best it's a collection of factions.
 

Israeli northern residents fume at ceasefire, still feel vulnerable to attack​

NAHARIYA, Israel, Nov 27 (Reuters) - For the first time in months on Wednesday, sirens warning of incoming attacks from Lebanon were not heard in northern Israel, but many residents were nonetheless outraged by the government's ceasefire with the Hezbollah armed group.
The deal, which promises to end a cross-border conflict that has killed thousands since it was ignited by the Gaza war last year, is seen as a major achievement by U.S. President Joe Biden's administration but has stirred anger and apprehension in Israel's north.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday Israel maintained its right to act in case Iran-backed Hezbollah broke the terms of the deal.
"What do I say? That it's very bad, real bad," Nahariya resident Levana Karsenti told Reuters of the agreement.
"They (the government) did nothing and our soldiers were wasted away for nothing. Bibi (Netanyahu) should pack himself out of the government quickly, even though I supported him. He needs to go home urgently."

Many residents of northern Israel fear Hezbollah may try to launch a ground assault, similar to the Hamas attack on Israel's south on Oct. 7, 2023.
Hezbollah strikes have killed 45 civilians in northern Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Some 60,000 people evacuated from homes in the north have still not been directed to return.
The bulk of the damage in Israel has been inflicted in areas adjacent to the Lebanese border, pummeled by Hezbollah rockets.

The deal should have included a buffer zone between Israel and Lebanon, the mayor of the northern city of Kiryat Shmonah, just three km (1.8 miles) from the border, told Reuters.
Because Hezbollah uses civilian homes to hide weapons and launch attacks on Israelis, said Mayor Avichai Stern, Israel would not have a legitimate basis for countering Hezbollah activity.
"These are military bases ... for the purpose of attacking the northern border communities, and therefore it is impossible to accept their continued existence," Stern said.

ISRAEL WILL NOT ALLOW ANOTHER OCT. 7, OFFICIAL SAYS​

Lebanon's military, tasked with ensuring the ceasefire lasts, has asked residents of Lebanese border villages to delay returning home until the Israeli military withdraws.
While the ceasefire largely held on Wednesday morning, Israel said it identified Hezbollah operatives returning to areas near the border and had opened fire to prevent them from coming closer.
A government official told Reuters that Israel had not prioritized the threat of infiltration in the deal because it is confident that the military gains Israel has made would give it enough warning time if Hezbollah forces were to try to launch a large-scale ground invasion like that of Oct. 7, 2023.

Israel has also destroyed enough Hezbollah infrastructure near the border that any infiltration attempt would be spotted and Israeli forces would have ample time to react, the official said.
At least 73 Israeli soldiers have been killed in northern Israel, the Golan Heights, and in combat in southern Lebanon, according to Israeli authorities.
"We are ready for any development and any violation of Hezbollah," a security official said. "We will not allow, not in Lebanon and not in Gaza, to have another 7 of October" but said "those are crucial days now" and that the ceasefire would need to be watched and measured on the merits.
The security official said the residents "need to feel and decide when it's safe" to return to their homes.
 
On that note, Israel continues to advise its citizens to stay away from returning to their homes in north Israel. I think they know something Biden doesn't.


And returning to the ICC arrest warrant against Netanyahu, France's foreign ministry says France will not arrest him. They say Israel is not an ICC signatory for their ruling to have any effect. (FWIW, neither does France recognize Palestine as an independent state). Furthermore, Italy would like to believe the ICC authority but isn't sure whether it is intended to apply to heads of state.

 
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Wonder what France says about Russian and Syrian leaders being immune from ICC charges because their respective states aren't members of the ICC?
 
Oh

PARIS, March 17 (Reuters) - The French government said on Friday that "no-one should escape justice", as it reacted to the International Criminal Court's (ICC) decision to issue an arrest warrant for Russia President Vladimir Putin.
"No-one responsable for crimes committed by Russia in Ukraine, regardless of their status, should escape justice," said the French Foreign Affairs Ministry on its FranceDiplomatie Twitter account.
 

French court confirms arrest warrant against Syria's Assad​

Paris (AFP) – Paris judges on Wednesday confirmed a French arrest warrant for Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad over alleged complicity in crimes against humanity for 2013 chemical attacks, the plaintiffs' lawyers said.
The court rejected arguments that the president enjoyed immunity © - / Syrian Presidency Telegram Page/AFP

The Paris appeals court found Assad could be sought over deadly August 2013 attacks on Syrian soil with chemical weapons.
"This is a historic decision. It's the first time a national court has recognised that a sitting head of state does not have total personal immunity" for their actions, said the plaintiffs' lawyers Clemence Bectarte, Jeanne Sulzer and Clemence Witt.
Prosecutors from a unit specialised in investigating terrorist attacks had sought to annul the warrant, arguing that immunity for foreign heads of state should only be lifted for international prosecutions, such as before the International Criminal Court (ICC).
They did not aim to "question the existence of evidence demonstrating Bashar al-Assad's complicity in the chemical attacks," they said.
France is believed to be the first country to have issued an arrest warrant for a sitting foreign head of state.
 
That's BS, not being part of the ICC should not protect from being arrested in countries that are. Didn't expect much from Macron, but it's shameful nevertheless.
 

Israel, Hezbollah each say other side violated ceasefire a day after truce takes effect​

Israeli military says it struck Hezbollah facility, renews curfew for residents in south Lebanon

The Israeli military said its air force struck a facility used by Hezbollah to store mid-range rockets in southern Lebanon on Thursday, after both sides accused each other of breaching a ceasefire that aims to halt more than a year of fighting.

Israel said it also opened fire on Thursday on what it called "suspects" with vehicles arriving at several areas in the southern zone, saying it was a breach of the truce with Hezbollah, which came into effect Wednesday.

Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah accused Israel of violating the deal.

"The Israeli enemy is attacking those returning to the border villages," Fadlallah told reporters, adding, "there are violations today by Israel, even in this form."

The exchange of accusations highlighted the fragility of the ceasefire, which was brokered by the United States and France to end the conflict, fought in parallel with the Gaza war. The truce lasts for 60 days in the hope of reaching a permanent cessation of hostilities.

Israel's airstrike on Thursday was the first since the truce took effect on Wednesday morning. Lebanese security sources and the Al Jadeed broadcaster said it took place near Baysariyah, north of the Litani River.

The ceasefire deal stipulates that unauthorized military facilities south of the Litani River should be dismantled, but does not mention military facilities north of the river.

Earlier, Israeli tank fire hit five towns and some agricultural fields in southern Lebanon, state media and Lebanese security sources said, saying at least two people were wounded.

  • Do you have questions about the conflict or ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel? Send them to us in an email at ask@cbc.ca.
All of the areas lie within two kilometres of the Blue Line demarcating the border between Lebanon and Israel, in an area the Israeli military has announced as a no-go zone along the border, even after the deal was agreed.

The Israeli military said in a statement that "several suspects were identified arriving with vehicles to a number of areas in southern Lebanon, breaching the conditions of the ceasefire."

It said troops "opened fire toward them" and would "actively enforce violations of the ceasefire agreement."

Residents told they could return home Wednesday​

Lebanese families displaced from their homes near the southern border have tried to return to check on their properties. But Israeli troops remain stationed within Lebanese territory in towns along the border, and Reuters reporters heard surveillance drones flying over parts of southern Lebanon.

The Israeli military on Thursday renewed a curfew restricting the movement of residents of southern Lebanon south of the Litani River between 5 p.m. and 7 a.m. local time.

The agreement, a rare diplomatic feat in a region racked by conflict, ended the deadliest confrontation between Israel and the Hezbollah militant group in years. But Israel is still fighting the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Lebanon's speaker of parliament Nabih Berri, the top interlocutor for Lebanon in negotiating the deal, had said on Wednesday that residents could return home.

Israeli forces instructed not to allow residents to return​

Under the ceasefire terms, Israeli forces can take up to 60 days to withdraw from southern Lebanon but neither side can launch offensive operations. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had instructed the military not to allow residents back to villages near the border.

Hezbollah has said its fighters "remain fully equipped to deal with the aspirations and assaults of the Israeli enemy." Its forces will monitor Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon "with their hands on the trigger."

The group has been weakened by casualties and the killing of its leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and other commanders by Israel.

More than 3,960 people were killed by Israeli fire in Lebanon during the conflict, many of them civilians, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. The fighting killed more than 70 people in Israel — more than half of them civilians — as well as dozens of Israeli soldiers fighting in southern Lebanon.

Some 1.2 million people were displaced in Lebanon, and thousands began streaming back to their homes on Wednesday, despite warnings from the Lebanese military and the Israeli army to stay out of certain areas. Some 50,000 people were displaced on the Israeli side, but few have returned and the communities near the northern border are still largely deserted.

Announcing the Lebanon accord on Tuesday, U.S. President Joe Biden said he would now renew his push for a ceasefire agreement in Gaza and urged Israel and Hamas to seize the moment. Months of efforts to negotiate a ceasefire have yielded scant progress, and negotiations are currently on hold.

Israeli military strikes killed at least 21 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Thursday, medics said, as forces stepped up their bombardment of central areas and tanks pushed deeper into the north and south of the enclave.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-hezbollah-ceasefire-violated-lebanon-1.7395489
 
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