BEIRUT, Lebanon
Lebanese caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati condemned what he described as repeated Israeli violations of the country’s sovereignty in a meeting on Thursday with Maj. Gen. Aroldo Lazaro, UNIFIL’s head of mission and force commander.
Mikati told the leader of the
peacekeeping force that Israel has ignored UN resolutions for years, and called
for “voices to be raised” in the UN in support of Lebanon.
The caretaker prime minister’s
comments coincided with the funeral of Hamas deputy political leader Saleh
Al-Arouri, who died in a suspected drone strike in southern Beirut on Tuesday.
Al-Arouri was buried in the
Palestinian Al-Shuhada cemetery in Shatila, Beirut, along with two Hamas
officials, Azzam Al-Aqra’ and Mohammed Al-Rayes, who were also killed in the
blast.
Gunshots were fired in
the air during the funeral, and mourners raised the Palestinian flag and
banners of Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
Lebanese security services are
investigating Al-Arouri’s death, while Hezbollah is also carrying out its own
probe into the assassination.
A security source said that
the investigations are “complex,” and focused on the type of drone, its route,
and the specifications of the missiles launched.
Retired Brig. Gen. George
Nader suggested in a media statement that there might be “an agent from the
decision-making circle, and not from outside, if we were to talk about a
security breach.”
Nader said: “Israel has
technology that allows it to fly drones at 30,000 feet or 7,000 meters without
being heard or seen. Fighter jets can launch missiles at a distance of 15,000
meters without being heard or seen, with very high accuracy exceeding 99 percent.”
He added: “There are two
ceilings above the room where Al-Arouri was present that were destroyed and
fell on him. This indicates the capabilities that Israel possesses.
“Technically, the
assassination has several possibilities, and we must wait for the
investigation.”
Former Prime Minister Fouad
Siniora, in a statement denouncing Al-Arouri’s assassination, questioned the
reason for “the presence of this number of armed Palestinian organizations and
other armed organizations in various Lebanese regions, including in Beirut’s
southern suburbs.”
He said: “In principle, this
matter requires the approval of the Lebanese official authorities, especially
since Lebanon is ultimately a republic that must preserve and protect its
sovereignty and emphasize not endangering its security and stability.”
Siniora’s reaction came
as Israel’s operations on Thursday targeted border villages, including
Maroun Al-Ras, near a Lebanese army point, where a fighter jet launched two
air-to-surface missiles.
The Israeli army attacked the
former Israeli detention site in the town of Khiam with phosphorus bombs, and
shelled the outskirts of Bint Jbeil, Yaroun, and Aita Al-Shaab.
Hezbollah announced on
Thursday that it had targeted “a position of Israeli soldiers in Shtula and the
Al-Jardah military point, and a gathering of soldiers in Metula and the Branit
military site, achieving direct hits.”
Israeli media said Hezbollah
fired an anti-tank missile toward Metula, hitting a building there.
Israeli drone strikes
continued late on Wednesday and Thursday, targeting residential buildings.
Hezbollah paid a heavy toll,
losing nine fighters in less than 24 hours, including field official Hussein
Hadi Yazbek in the Naqoura area.
On Wednesday evening, the
Israeli army stepped up its attacks, destroying a three-story building in
Naqoura with drones.
Among Hezbollah members killed
were Hadi Ali Rida from Teffahta, Ibrahim Afif Fahs from Jibchit, and Hussein
Ali Mohammad Ghazaleh from Adloun, in addition to Abbas Hassan Jammoul, Hassan
Dakik, and Mohammad Hadi Obeid.
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