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Israel strikes Lebanon after mortar launched

Military action comes 3 months after 2 countries saw their worst cross-border fire in years

By AFP - Jul 06,2023 - Last updated at Jul 06,2023

Smoke from Israeli shelling rises in the fields between Kfar Chouba and Halta, in southern Lebanon, on Thursday (AFP photo)

GHAJAR — The Israeli forces said on Thursday they struck southern Lebanon after a mortar launched from its northern neighbour exploded in the border area between the two foes.

The latest military action was launched three months after the two countries saw their worst cross-border fire in years.

It also comes at a time of rising tension between Israel and Arab countries after Israel carried out its biggest military operation in years in the occupied West Bank targeting the Jenin refugee camp, a densely populated urban area and militant stronghold.

"A launch was carried out from Lebanese territory which exploded adjacent to the border in Israeli territory," said a statement from the Israeli army, whose spokesman specified the projectile that hit near the town of Ghajar was a mortar.

"In response, the IDF  is currently striking the area from which the launch was carried out in Lebanese territory," said an army statement shortly before midday (09:00 GMT).

A spokesman for the town of Ghajar, Bilal Al Khatib, said the projectile struck "close to homes and, if it wasn't for God's kindness, it would have hit people".

Lebanon's official National News Agency said Israel had subsequently fired "more than 15 artillery shells", which hit around the communities of Kfar Chouba and Halta.

The two countries are still technically at war, and peacekeepers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon patrol the border between them.

UNIFIL commander Major General Aroldo Lazaro was working with the Israeli and Lebanese authorities "to prevent further escalation", the peacekeeping body said in a statement, calling on "everyone to exercise restraint".

Earlier on Thursday, Lebanon's armed Hizbollah movement had denounced Israel for building a concrete wall around Ghajar, a small town that straddles the border.

The Iran-backed Shiite group called on the Lebanese state to take action to "prevent the consolidation of this occupation" by Israel of Ghajar, home to around 3,000 people.

Hizbollah denounced Israel for the erection of "a barbed wire fence and the construction of a concrete wall around the entire locality".

The so-called Blue Line cuts through Ghajar, formally placing its northern part in Lebanon and its southern part in the Israeli-occupied and annexed Golan Heights.

The town’s spokesman said residents had built the barrier themselves, not the Israeli military. “It’s to protect our lands and our children from wild animals,” Khatib told AFP.

The residents of Ghajar have been granted Israeli citizenship rights, and Israel has recently opened the town, long a military zone, to tourism.

Hizbollah charged that Israel had now “completely imposed their force on the Lebanese, occupied parts of the town and submitted it to its administration, in parallel with the opening of the town to tourists”.

Thursday’s cross-border fire follows Israel bombarding Lebanon in April, in response to a barrage of rockets fired from the country.

The April incident was the heaviest rocket fire from Lebanon since Israel fought a war with Hizbollah in 2006.

UNIFIL, which was established in 1978, was beefed up in response to that 34-day conflict.

Last month, Hizbollah said it shot down an Israeli drone that had flown into Lebanon’s southern airspace.

Israeli warplanes and drones regularly violate Lebanon’s airspace, while the powerful Shiite movement for years has been sending drones towards Israel.

Weeks earlier Hizbollah had put on a display of military might, with mock cross-border raids into Israel a few kilometres from the border.

The strikes on Lebanon come a day after Israel hit militant targets in the Gaza Strip, in response to rocket fire from the coastal Palestinian territory.

Twelve Palestinians and one Israeli soldier were killed in the two-day raid on the northern city of Jenin and its adjacent refugee camp.

Israeli forces launched drone strikes and employed an army bulldozer to rip up streets in Jenin’s refugee camp, prompting at least 3,000 residents to flee.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 June War and has imposed a crippling blockade on Gaza since 2007, when the militant group Hamas took power.

 

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