Lebanon calls for pressure to be put on Israel to prevent violations of international law

Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam speaking during a press conference after a cabinet session in Beirut on December 26, 2025. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 10 February 2026
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Lebanon calls for pressure to be put on Israel to prevent violations of international law

  • Israeli forces conduct operation in Lebanon, abduct official, kill 4 Lebanese people including child

BEIRUT: Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has instructed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to act with the UN to put pressure on Israel to disclose the fate of a Lebanese citizen abducted by the Israeli army early on Monday.

Israelis reportedly crossed into Lebanese territory, entering the town of Habbariyeh in the Hasbaya District, and abducted the citizen from his home.

This incursion and abduction is the first of its kind since the cessation of hostilities between the countries.

Meanwhile, Israel continued its airstrikes on Monday, killing three people, including a 4-year-old child, when a civilian vehicle was targeted.

A sniper also shot another person in the border town of Ayta ash Shab, who reportedly later died.

Atwi Atwi was the man added to the list of Lebanese prisoners in Israel, bringing the total to 24. Three of the prisoners were captured before the last Israeli war on Lebanon.

An Israeli force from the 210th Brigade in the Mount Dov area reportedly infiltrated from the Ruwaisat Al-Alam outpost toward Sadanah Hill, traveling on foot for about an hour before reaching a house on the outskirts of Habbariyeh.

The soldiers stormed the house and handcuffed Atwi’s wife. Atwi, 65, attempted to resist but was captured and taken toward Israeli border positions.

The abducted official was the former mayor of Habbariyeh and the head of the Islamic Group in Hasbaya and Marjeyoun, an ally of Iran-backed Hezbollah in its recent war. He works in social and humanitarian affairs in the area, according to several residents.

An Israeli army statement confirmed Atwi’s abduction in a “nighttime operation” which had been formulated on intelligence information gathered in recent weeks. The statement added that he was transferred to Israel for interrogation and that weapons were found inside the building.

The statement also affirmed that the Israeli army would continue its operations to eliminate “threats on the northern front.”

The Israeli escalation came a day after Salam’s visit to the border region, which left residents in the south with the impression that “the state stands with them.”

In a statement issued on Monday, Salam said that “the incident constitutes a blatant assault on Lebanon’s sovereignty, a violation of the declaration of cessation of hostilities, and a flagrant breach of international law.”

He stressed that “it will remain a national priority, and the state will follow up on it through all diplomatic and legal channels in place.”

The local municipality convened a meeting with a delegation from the UN Interim Force in Lebanon to brief it on the incident, and residents of the area of the abduction organized a protest expressing their fear that “Israeli practices prevalent in the 1970s could return, when Israeli soldiers used to infiltrate deep into populated areas.”

Bassam Hammoud, deputy head of the political bureau of the Islamic Group in Lebanon, said that the group was “committed to the decisions of the Lebanese state and to what has been approved under the cessation of hostilities agreement.”

Hammoud added: “We have taken no actions outside the framework of this agreement, whether military, field-based, or otherwise. And even if they found a rifle inside the house (belonging to Atwi), so what? Is there any Lebanese home that does not have a rifle inside?”

The Islamic Group issued a statement which held “the Israeli occupation fully responsible for any harm that may befall the abducted individual.”

Meanwhile, the Israeli army said that it had targeted a civilian vehicle near the town of Yanouh, describing the attack as “an airstrike to assassinate Hezbollah’s Head of Artillery Ahmad Ali Salami, in (the) Yanouh area.”

The Israeli army said in a statement: “Ahmad carried out numerous terror attacks throughout the war against IDF troops and Israel, and recently operated to rehabilitate Hezbollah’s artillery capabilities from within the civilian population in Lebanon, in violation of the ceasefire understandings.”

The airstrike killed Salami, 4-year-old Ali Hassan Jaber and his father Hassan.

Lebanese Interior Minister Ahmad Al-Hajjar condemned the attack, noting that Hassan Jaber was “a member of the Internal Security Forces who was killed while passing by with his son near the site targeted by the Israeli airstrike in the town of Yanouh.”

Al-Hajjar also condemned the abduction of Atwi from his home, describing the act as “an unacceptable transgression and a flagrant violation of Lebanese sovereignty and security.”

The Israeli army claimed that it was “aware of allegations indicating that uninvolved civilians had fallen as a result of the strike,” explaining that, prior to carrying it out, “measures were taken aimed at limiting subsequent harm to civilians, including the use of precision munitions and the conduct of aerial surveillance, and it regrets any harm that befell uninvolved civilians.”

It added: “The Israeli army is working to reduce damage as much as possible, and the incident is under review.”

 

 


Iranians fleeing cities under attack seek refuge in the countryside

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Iranians fleeing cities under attack seek refuge in the countryside

  • Tens of thousands of Iranians are fleeing Tehran and other cities as Israeli and US bombardment spreads fear
  • he UN refugee agency says that about 100,000 people left the Iran’s capital Tehran in the war’s first two days and that the level of displacement is surely much higher by now
BEIRUT: Terrified by explosions shaking their homes in Tehran and other cities, tens of thousands of Iranians have packed up and left, finding refuge in small, remote towns to wait out massive bombardment by Israel and the United States.
Pouya Akhgari, 22, is holed up in a family house with aunts and cousins in a village 200 kilometers (120 miles) from his home in the capital, Tehran. As snow falls in the mountainous countryside of Zanjan province, he mostly spends his days watching movies and TV shows and sometimes ventures out to the nearest main town.
The village has been spared strikes, but Akhgari’s friends in Tehran tell him about the blasts all around them.
“It just feels so chaotic. I thought it’d be very short but it’s dragging on,” he told The Associated Press by a messaging app. ”If it goes on like this, we’ll run out of money.”
The UN refugee agency said that in the first two days of the war, about 100,000 people fled Tehran, a city of around 9.7 million. It said that the scale of displacement is likely much higher, though it didn’t have figures for the days since, or on the flight from other cities.
A strawberry farm’s relative safety
A 39-year-old lawyer endured a day of explosions that shook her home in the city of Ahvaz, 800 kilometers (500 miles) southeast of Tehran. The next day, on March 2, she packed up her things and hit the road with her brother, sister and their families — and their dogs Coco and Maggie.
They went to their family’s strawberry farm in a small town several hours away. She and others reached by the AP spoke on condition of anonymity to prevent reprisals, and she asked that the town not be identified.
The town doesn’t have any military bases, so it feels relatively safe. Still, southern Iran has been the target of some of the most intense bombardment. She said that the next town over — which is even smaller — saw an explosion when a strike hit an ammunition site belonging to the Revolutionary Guard, the nation’s most powerful armed force.
She worries that strikes could target a gym used by Guard members a few hundred meters down the road from their farm. Airstrikes have hit a number of sports facilities around Iran, apparently because the Guard often uses such sites as gathering places. The gym is probably far enough away that it won’t affect them if it’s hit, she said, “but all the same, the danger exists.”
No one is going to work, and the kids are far from school. To pass the time and keep their minds off things, they walk the dogs, play board games and pick strawberries.
The peacefulness of the nature around them helps make the war feel distant — the clouds rolling across the green hills, the bleating of their neighbor’s goats at sunset. The brightest spot, the lawyer said, was when one of the two farm dogs, Maya, gave birth to a litter of puppies.
Still, uncertainty hangs over everything.
“From morning to night, we talk about what is happening, our worries, how everything gets more expensive every day, about how far our money will stretch,” she said.
“If this situation continues, we will have problems meeting basic needs.”
Between bombardment and the Revolutionary Guard
The US-Israeli campaign has struck heavy blows to Iran’s leadership, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and top military figures. It has also particularly targeted the Revolutionary Guard and paramilitary Basij, the forces that are tasked with protecting the cleric-led Islamic Republic and that have led the crushing of waves of anti-government protests, including ones in January,
The leadership has kept its hold. Khamenei’s son, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, was named the new supreme leader this week. The Guard and Basij have shown that their local networks are still in place so far.
The lawyer said that on the rare times she left the farm to go into town, she saw that members of the Basij were now more heavily armed in the streets.
“They are waiting for the slightest movement” showing dissent, she said.
She once campaigned against the mandatory hijab — in fact, she was briefly detained in the past — and stopped wearing it years ago. But since the war, she wears one when she leaves home for fear of provoking the Basij.
The town is traditionally considered pro-government, she said, and many residents have taken state positions or joined the Guard. Religious and patronage loyalties run deep in rural areas in particular, since the Islamic Republic brought basic services to Iran’s countryside and small towns.
Still, she has seen signs of growing discontent even here. Large crowds turned out in the town for January’s anti-government protests, she said, and observance of the state’s official mourning week for Khamenei has been muted, with few people wearing black as urged by authorities.
The ‘remarkable kindness’ of strangers
One man described how, before fleeing home in Tehran, explosions made his 6½-year-old son tremble in fear.
“You place him between you and your wife in bed, hoping he might feel safer,” he said, but he still screamed in his sleep. They decided it was time to leave.
As they drove through the capital, they saw cars on the roadside, their windows shattered from blasts. Leaving the city at the foothills of the Alborz Mountains north of Tehran, they saw columns of smoke rising from different parts of the city into the overcast sky.
“The scene made the city look frightening,” he said.
On the highway west out of Tehran, heavy with traffic, explosions shook their car, terrifying his son, he said. Finally they reached a family home in a small village on the other side of the mountains, northwest of the capital, overlooking the Caspian Sea.
There they spend their days in the house, surrounded by rice paddies, with snow-capped mountains in the distance. Each day, he and his wife take their son out for walks.
“Boys have so much energy, and in a village, there is not much fun for him,” he said. In the evenings, his wife’s mother and father, who also fled Tehran, visit.
Amid all the chaos, local residents show “remarkable kindness,” he said.
He said he went to the neighborhood bakery to buy bread and found a long line. When the baker realized he wasn’t from the area, he called him to the front of the line, then tried to refuse payment for the bread.
“The others in line were very friendly, asking whether I had a place to stay and whether I needed anything,” he said.
Leaving home isn’t an option for everyone.
One 53-year-old man in Tehran said that he can’t move his elderly parents and so is staying home. The strain is immense, he said.
“At night, I go down to the parking garage, sit inside my car and scream out loud,” he said. “I pray for calm and for quieter days.”