Israel is trying to destabilize Lebanon and Syria: Arab League chief

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Mourners pray over the flag-draped coffins of people killed in reported Israeli shelling on Nawa in Syria's southern province of Daraa, during their funeral on April 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Mourners carry the caskets of slain Palestinian militant group Hamas commander Hassan Farhat (C), his son Hamza (R) and daughter Jenan (L) during their funeral on April 4, 2025. They were killed in an Israeli drone strike that targeted their apartment in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon. (AFP)
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Goats graze near objects reportedly left behind by Israeli troops in Horsh Sad Tassil in Syria's southern province of Daraa, on April 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 05 April 2025
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Israel is trying to destabilize Lebanon and Syria: Arab League chief

  • Targeted assassinations in Lebanon an unacceptable breach of the ceasefire agreement Israel signed late last year, Aboul Gheit said

CAIRO: Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit on Saturday accused Israel of trying to destabilize Syria and Lebanon through military provocations, in “flagrant disregard for international legal norms.”

In a statement, Aboul Gheit said that global inaction had further emboldened Israel.

“(T)he wars waged by Israel on the occupied Palestinian territories, Lebanon and Syria have entered a new phase of complete recklessness, deliberately violating signed agreements, invading countries and killing more civilians,” said the statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency.

He said that Israel’s resumption of targeted assassinations in Lebanon was an unacceptable and condemnable breach of the ceasefire agreement it signed with Lebanon late last year. 

Aboul Gheit said that Israel’s actions were driven by narrow domestic agendas at the expense of civilian lives and regional peace.

“It seems that the Israeli war machine does not want to stop as long as the occupation leaders insist on facing their internal crises by exporting them abroad, and this situation has become clear to everyone,” he said.

According to the Gaza Ministry of Health’s count last week, more than 50,000 people have been killed and more than 113,200 wounded in Israeli attacks on Palestinian territories in retaliation against the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack on southern Israel.

In Lebanon, war monitors have said that at least 3,961 people were killed and 16,520 wounded in Israel’s war with the Iran-backed Hezbollah movement from Oct. 8, 2023 to Nov. 26, 2024.

Syria’s new government accused Israel on April 3 of mounting a deadly destabilization campaign after a wave of strikes on military targets, including an airport, and a ground incursion that killed 13 people in the southern province of Daraa. 


Israeli airstrike kills two in Gaza, Israel says targeted Hamas militant

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Israeli airstrike kills two in Gaza, Israel says targeted Hamas militant

  • Several people were also wounded in the airstrike, which struck a house in Gaza City

CAIRO/JERUSALEM: An Israeli airstrike killed at least two Palestinians in Gaza on Wednesday, local health authorities said, in what the military said was ​a retaliatory attack on a Hamas militant that was launched after its troops had come under fire.
Medical officials did not immediately identify the people killed. They said several people were also wounded in the airstrike, which struck a house in Gaza City. There was no immediate comment from Hamas.
The ‌Israeli military said ‌that Hamas militants had ‌shot ⁠at soldiers ​earlier ‌on Wednesday and that the airstrike targeted a senior Hamas militant who had directed attacks on its troops. The military did not say whether it had suffered any casualties.
Separately on Wednesday, in the southern Gaza area of Rafah, an Israeli-backed Palestinian militia said ⁠that it had killed two Hamas men, marking a renewed challenge ‌to the militant group.
Hamas has ‍been reestablishing its grip in the enclave, where it continues to command thousands of men despite suffering heavy blows during the war.
Israel occupies ​over half of Gaza — areas where Hamas’ foes operate beyond its reach. With US ⁠President Donald Trump’s plan for Gaza moving slowly, there is no immediate prospect of further Israeli withdrawals.
Fighting has greatly abated since Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in October after two years of war, but it has not stopped entirely. Both sides have accused each other of violations of the ceasefire.
More than 400 Palestinians, most of them civilians according to Gaza health officials, have been killed since the ‌truce began, as well as three Israeli soldiers.