The UN says its peacekeeping vehicles in Lebanon have been rammed by an Israeli tank. Photo / Kawnat Haju, AFP
The UN says its peacekeeping vehicles in Lebanon have been rammed by an Israeli tank. Photo / Kawnat Haju, AFP
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam says he is working to stop the Israel-Hezbollah war, even as Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu tells troops in south Lebanon the fight there is far from over.
The Lebanese Red Cross said one of its paramedics had been killed in thesouth.
It said its teams had been “directly targeted by an Israeli drone” while on a humanitarian mission, even though “the ambulances and their crews bore the protective Red Cross emblem”.
Secretary General of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Jagan Chapagain, said he was “appalled and saddened” at the killing of a second Lebanese Red Cross volunteer in weeks.
The United Nations peacekeeping force Unifil said an Israeli tank rammed its vehicles twice, “in one case causing significant damage”.
“We are continuing our efforts ... to negotiate to stop the war,” he added, before planned talks on Tuesday in Washington between Lebanese, Israeli and US officials.
Lebanon was pulled into the Middle East conflict when Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel after US-Israeli strikes killed Iran’s supreme leader.
Israel has responded with massive strikes and a ground invasion.
‘Accountability’
During a visit to troops in southern Lebanon yesterday, Netanyahu said Israeli forces had eliminated the threat of an invasion by Hezbollah militants.
But he added: “There is still more to do, and we are doing it”.
“The war continues, including within the security zone in Lebanon,” Netanyahu said in a video released by his office.
Israeli officials have repeatedly said Israel wants to establish a “security zone” in south Lebanon to help prevent Hezbollah attacks.
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported Israeli attacks on dozens of locations in the south on Sunday, with additional strikes on the adjacent West Bekaa area.
The health ministry raised the war’s overall toll to more than 2050 dead, including 165 children and more than 80 health workers.
The Lebanese Red Cross condemned attacks on its personnel as “clear and blatant violations of all provisions of international law”.
Israeli military vehicles line up along the Israel-Lebanon border after the start of the Iran war. Photo / Jalaa Marey, AFP
Before Sunday’s deadly mission, which also wounded another paramedic, “the necessary contacts were made with Unifil for protection and safe passage”, it said.
Israel’s military has repeatedly accused Hezbollah of using ambulances for military ends.
Lebanon’s health ministry also said an Israeli strike on Qana killed five people, including three women, and wounded 25 others.
An AFP photographer in the southern town saw significant destruction as an excavator worked to clear debris and first responders carried a body out from under the rubble.
‘Moral obligation’
In south Lebanon’s Bazuriyeh, Hassan Berro, a rescue worker from the Risala Scout association – which is affiliated with the Hezbollah-allied Amal movement – said: “Our emergency centre was hit and completely destroyed, with all its contents, including beds and medical equipment.”
The AFP photographer saw windows shattered and debris covering several hospital beds in the building, where walls and ceilings were also damaged.
Also on Sunday, the Israeli army accused Hezbollah of using a hospital compound in south Lebanon’s Bint Jbeil “for military purposes”.
Hezbollah said it had launched attacks on Israeli targets across the border and inside Lebanon, including against troops in Bint Jbeil, where the NNA reported heavy fighting.
Pope Leo XIV, who visited Lebanon late last year, expressed his closeness to the Lebanese people on Sunday.
He said there was a “moral obligation to protect the civilian population from the atrocious effects of war”.