Iran president denounces Israel attack on Beirut as ‘flagrant war crime’

Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian attends a press conference in Tehran, Iran, September 16, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 28 September 2024
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Iran president denounces Israel attack on Beirut as ‘flagrant war crime’

  • Pezeshkian vowed Iran “will stand with the Lebanese nation and the axis of resistance”

TEHRAN, Iran: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian condemned Israel’s air strikes on the Lebanese capital’s densely populated southern suburbs Friday as a “flagrant war crime.”
“The attacks perpetrated ... by the Zionist regime in the Dahiya neighborhood of Beirut constitute a flagrant war crime that has revealed once again the nature of this regime’s state terrorism,” Pezeshkian said in a statement carried by the official IRNA news agency early Saturday.
Israel said its strikes targeted the “central headquarters” of Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, an Iranian ally.
Pezeshkian vowed Iran “will stand with the Lebanese nation and the axis of resistance.”
Friday’s strikes were by far the fiercest to hit Beirut since Israel shifted its focus from the war in Gaza to Lebanon this week, pounding Hezbollah strongholds around the country and killing hundreds of people.
The Iranian embassy in Lebanon warned that they marked a “dangerous escalation” in the Middle East.
“This reprehensible crime... represents a dangerous escalation that changes the rules of the game,” the embassy said in a post on X, adding that Israel “will receive the appropriate punishment.”
The Iranian foreign ministry said that the “brutal” strike gave the lie to a US-led ceasefire call issued on the eve of the strike.
“The continuation of the Zionist regime’s crimes shows clearly that the ceasefire call issued by the United States and some Western countries is a blatant trick aimed at winning time for the Zionist regime to continue its crimes against the Palestinian and Lebanese peoples,” ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said in a statement
Hezbollah started fighting Israeli troops along the Lebanon border a day after its Palestinian ally Hamas staged its unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7.
 

 


Israeli approval of West Bank land registration draws outrage

Updated 57 min 12 sec ago
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Israeli approval of West Bank land registration draws outrage

  • Israel’s government has approved a process to register land in the West Bank, drawing condemnation

JERUSALEM: Israel’s government has approved a process to register land in the West Bank, drawing condemnation from Arab nations and critics who labelled it a “mega land grab” that would accelerate annexation of the Palestinian territory.
Israel’s foreign ministry said the measure would enable “transparent and thorough clarification of rights to resolve legal disputes” and was needed after unlawful land registration in areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority.
But Egypt, Qatar and Jordan criticized the move as illegal under international law.
In a statement, the Egyptian government called it a “dangerous escalation aimed at consolidating Israeli control over the occupied Palestinian territories.”
Qatar’s foreign ministry condemned the “decision to convert West Bank lands into so-called ‘state property’,” saying it would “deprive the Palestinian people of their rights.”
The Palestinian Authority called for international intervention to prevent the “de facto beginning of the annexation process and the undermining of the foundations of the Palestinian state.”
Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now called Sunday’s measure a “mega land grab.”
According to public broadcaster Kan, land registration will be reopened in the West Bank for the first time since 1967 — when Israel captured the territory in the Middle East war.
The Israeli media reported that the process will take place only in Area C, which constitutes some 60 percent of West Bank territory and is under Israeli security and administrative control.
Palestinians see the West Bank as foundational to any future Palestinian state, but many on Israel’s religious right want to take over the land.
Last week, Israel’s security cabinet approved a series of measures backed by far-right ministers to tighten control over areas of the West Bank administered by the Palestinian Authority under the Oslo accords in place since the 1990s.
Those measures, which also sparked international backlash, include allowing Jewish Israelis to buy West Bank land directly and allowing Israeli authorities to administer certain religious sites in areas under the Palestinian Authority’s control.
Excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, more than 500,000 Israelis live in West Bank settlements and outposts, which are illegal under international law.
Around three million Palestinians live in the territory.