Thursday, December 19, 2024

Lebanon ceasefire panel meets as Israeli settlers cross border

Three weeks since the ceasefire came into effect, Israel has shown no signs of ending its violations in southern Lebanon as it continues to destroy villages.


The New Arab Staff
19 December, 2024

Naqoura's mayor said the destruction in his town had doubled since the ceasefire came into effect with Israel's ongoing attacks [AFP/Getty]

A committee overseeing the ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah met Wednesday, as Israeli forces bulldozed a village and settlers crossed into southern Lebanon in a gross violation of the deal.

The committee monitoring the US-brokered deal, which came into effect on 27 November, met in Ras Naqoura near the Israeli border. The multinational panel includes generals from the US - which is leading the committee - France, Israel, Lebanon, and the UN peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon, UNIFIL.

The meeting took place as Israel continued to demolish Lebanese border towns and villages, violating the ceasefire with airstrikes and shelling. Under the deal, Israel has 60 days by the end of January to withdraw its military entities still present in parts of southern Lebanon.

Israeli drones and war planes have also continued to conduct reconnaissance flights over the Lebanese capital.

"The United States, France, UNIFIL, LAF, and IDF met again on December 18 in Naqoura. UNIFIL hosted the meeting, with the United States serving as chair, assisted by France, and joined by the LAF and IDF," a joint statement read.

"The Mechanism will continue to meet in this format regularly and coordinate closely to support implementation of the ceasefire agreement and UNSCR 1701."

UN Security Council Resolution 1701 was adopted in 2006 to end the summer war that year between Hezbollah and Israel was but was never implemented.

Hezbollah and Israel began firing at each other on 8 October last year in a fallout over the Gaza war, but the fighting escalated into a full-blown war on 23 September, which saw swathes of southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs and the eastern Baalbek-Hermel region devastated.

Israeli forces then invaded southern Lebanon on 1 October, claiming it was a "limited incursion" to push Hezbollah back from the border.

Thousands were killed in Lebanon and the war triggered the country’s worst displacement crisis with more than a million being forced to leave their homes.

While the Israeli military gradually pulls out of south Lebanon, the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) must be deployed in their thousands, especially south of the Litani River, UNIFIL’s area of op
erations. Hezbollah must move its fighters and heavy weaponry behind the river.

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Analysis
Dario Sabaghi

'Naqoura is 70 percent destroyed'

Continuing its scorched earth policy, Israel claims it is clearing southern Lebanon of all installations belonging to Hezbollah, and says its airstrikes are targeting the Shia militant group’s military infrastructure and personnel.

While the LAF and UNIFIL are both obliged to dismantle what remains of Hezbollah’s infrastructure in the region, and the Lebanese army must stop any weapons being smuggled into the country and disarm all militias, observers say Israel is taking advantage of the 60-day deadline to destroy what it can.

Israel had warned that it would continue to target what it deemed "active threats" from Lebanon even if a ceasefire deal was reached. A side deal between Washington and Tel Aviv is believed to have given Israel the right to strike if the LAF and UNIFIL do not act after being informed of an "imminent threat."


In the village of Naqoura, where UNIFIL is based and where the panel met on Wednesday, the situation is bleak like in much of southern Lebanon, where entire towns and villages were flattened in Israel’s relentless offensive.

The mayor of Naqoura, Abbas Awada, revealed that the percentage of destruction in his town increased from 35 percent to 70 percent after the ceasefire came into effect, expressing his surprise at the lack of action by UNIFIL forces to stop the Israeli violations.

"The Israeli enemy is systematically destroying the town located only three kilometres from the border, where the percentage of destruction has risen to 70 percent since the truce took effect," Awada said in a statement, according to Lebanese media.

He said the municipality is unable to inspect the full extent of the damage yet as the Israeli army continues to prevent residents from entering the village.

Since 27 November, the Israeli military has frequently warned people from approaching the no-go border zone as long as Israeli forces remain there. So far, Israeli troops have started pulling out of the town of Khiam, making way for LAF soldiers to move in.

"The videos and photos received from there [Naqoura] confirm that the Israeli enemy army brought its vehicles to bulldoze homes, shops, and civilian facilities in an attempt to take revenge on the town and its people…despite the cessation of hostilities," Awada said.

Awada said he was surprised by the lack of action show by UNIFIL and authorities in charge of monitoring the ceasefire, despite the UN peacekeepers being located there.

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Alex Martin Astley

Israeli settlers cross into Lebanon


In another serious violation of the ceasefire deal, a group of far-right Israeli settlers from the Uri Tzafon group crossed into southern Lebanon from Israel and put up a tent settlement.

The Times of Israel reported 10 days ago that the group, advocating the annexation and settlement of southern Lebanon as they claim it is part of their "Promised Land", said they had crossed the border and established an outpost.


The Israeli army said it removed the group of settlers on Wednesday, saying the "serious incident" was under investigation.

"The preliminary investigation indicates that the civilians indeed crossed the blue line by a few metres, and after being identified by IDF forces, they were removed from the area," said a statement by the Israeli military.

"Any attempt to approach or cross the border into Lebanese territory without coordination poses a life-threatening risk and interferes with the IDF's ability to operate in the area and carry out its mission," the statement said.

The Times of Israel said the area the group claimed to have entered was in the no-go zone still being occupied by Israeli forces.

Uri Tzafon, or The South Lebanon Settlement Movement, was established after a similar extremist movement was formed among Israeli settlers, seeking to reoccupy and settle the war-torn Gaza Strip. The latter is backed by far-right and hardline parliamentarian settlers in Israel such as Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich.

Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982 at the height of the Lebanese Civil War and occupied parts of the south until withdrawing in May 2000.

Israel military confirms settlers crossed into Lebanon, established outpost before dispersing them

December 18, 2024 
Middle East Monitor – 


A general view of the southern Lebanese village of Zahire as seen from the northern Israeli village of Aramsha near the Lebanon border on December 04, 2024 [Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu Agency]

Israel’s military has confirmed that a group of illegal Jewish settlers crossed over the border into southern Lebanon earlier this month, claiming that soldiers were forced to remove them due to an ongoing ceasefire deal with Beirut.

Earlier this month, Israeli settlers – led by the extremist settler group, Uri Tzafon – claimed to have crossed the northern border into Lebanese territory and established an outpost settlement. The Israeli military, however, said at the time that those claims were false.

Occupation forces have now acknowledged and confirmed that the illegal settlers did enter Lebanon and attempt to establish an encampment, according to Reuters news agency, stating today that the military’s “preliminary investigation indicates that the civilians indeed crossed the blue line by a few metres, and after being identified by IDF forces, they were removed from the area”.

The alleged dispersal of the settlers by Occupation soldiers was reportedly due to the area being a closed military zone, with the Israeli military stressing that “Any attempt to approach or cross the border into Lebanese territory without coordination poses a life-threatening risk and interferes with the IDF’s ability to operate in the area and carry out its mission.”

According to The Times of Israel, a military source has claimed that the army has, in recent weeks, worked to block various entry points into Lebanon along Israel’s border fence.

READ: Israel violates ceasefire in Lebanon 12 times on Tuesday, bringing total violations to 248

UN Security Council denounces illegal Israel settlements in Palestine


December 18, 2024
Middle East Monitor – 

Members of the United Nations Security Council attend a meeting on the situation in the Middle East at the United Nations headquarters on December 17, 2024 in New York City [Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images]

UN Security Council members warned on Wednesday about Israel’s illegal settlements and violent actions in the Occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, Anadolu Agency reports.

Some demanded a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.

Khaled Khiari, UN assistant Secretary-General for the Middle East and Asia and the Pacific, told the Security Council of the “relentless Israel settlement expansion near the Occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem,” and said that “in Gaza, the ceasefire is long overdue.”

“The continued collective punishment of the Palestinian people is unjustifiable. The relentless bombardment of Gaza by Israeli forces, the larger number of civilian casualties, the blanket destruction of Palestinian neighbourhoods and the worsening of the humanitarian situation are horrific,” he said.

Expressing deep concern about the continued illegal expansions by Israeli settlers, Khiari said it fuels tensions and impedes the possibility of an “independent, democratic, contiguous and sovereign Palestinian State”.

“I reiterate that all Israeli settlements in the Occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, have no legal validity and are in flagrant violation of international law and UN resolutions,” he said.

The UK’s deputy, James Kariuki, pointed to the “shocking increase in cases of acute malnutrition in children” in Gaza, and said, “Gaza now has the highest number of child amputees per capita in the world.”

Urging Israel to do more to protect civilians and abide by international obligations, Kariuki said: “The UK calls on Israel to stop settlement expansion on Palestinian land, which is illegal under international law and to hold violent settlers to account.”

“Continued instability and settler violence in the West Bank should not be tolerated by Israel and the culture of impunity must end,” he said.

He rejected attempts at the “forcible transfer of Gazans from or within Gaza”, and said: “There must be no reduction of the territory of the Gaza Strip. Israel’s expansion of military infrastructure and the destruction of civilian buildings and agricultural land across the Strip is unacceptable.”

Switzerland’s envoy, Pascale Baeriswyl, denounced the starvation of Gazans, “the use of which as a method of warfare constitutes a war crime under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.”

She demanded an immediate ceasefire and condemned Israeli officials’ statements that announced plans to expand illegal settlements in Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Russian envoy, Vassily Nebenzia, noted the US’ repeated vetoes on ceasefire resolutions at the Security Council and claimed that the reason is to “make sure that the Israeli military operation can continue in Gaza, and therefore that the lives of hostages continue being endangered.”

Describing Israel’s actions in the Occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem as “illegal”, he said it also violates relevant Security Council and General Assembly resolutions.

“We are particularly concerned by the statements made by the Israeli officials about forcibly changing the demographics of Gaza so as to recolonise the Strip,” he said.

China’s deputy envoy, Geng Shuang, urged the Council to use all options “in its toolbox and taking all necessary actions to end the conflict in Gaza, and urge the relevant country not to block Council actions anymore,” referring to the US.

Geng demanded Israel “immediately cease military operations in Gaza, fulfil its obligation on international humanitarian law, lift the blockade of Gaza and restrictions on humanitarian access.”

US envoy, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, voiced concern that “Israeli actions in the West Bank undercut the Palestinian Authority’s ability to meet the needs of the Palestinian people, and more broadly, dampen the prospects of a two-state solution.”

“We reiterate our position that Israeli settlements in the West Bank are an obstacle to the achievement of a two-state solution,” she said, adding that Israel’s illegal settlements are “inconsistent with international law and only serves to weaken Israeli security”.

She highlighted “alarming” reports of a record number of Palestinians killed in the Occupied West Bank and urged Israel to “intervene and stop them from, better yet, prevent them in the first place.”

“We urge Israel to halt efforts to legalise outposts in the West Bank and to do everything possible to de-escalate tensions and hold all perpetrators of violence accountable, no matter the background of the perpetrator or the victim,” she said.

READ: Israel has killed at least 12,800 Palestinian students since October 2023

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