Israel says 4 soldiers killed by Hezbollah drone attack while Israeli strike in Gaza leaves 20 dead
UNB
Publish: 14 Oct 2024, 01:52 PM
DEIR
AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip , Oct 14 (AP/UNB)- A Hezbollah drone attack on an army
base in central Israel killed four soldiers and severely wounded seven others
Sunday, the military said, in the deadliest strike by the militant group since
Israel launched its ground invasion of Lebanon nearly two weeks ago.
The Lebanon-based
Hezbollah called the attack near Binyamina city retaliation for Israeli strikes
on Beirut on Thursday that killed 22 people. It later said it targeted Israel's
elite Golani brigade, launching dozens of missiles to occupy Israeli air
defense systems during the assault by "squadrons" of drones.
Israel's national rescue
service said the attack wounded 61. With Israel's advanced air-defense systems,
it's rare for so many people to be injured by drones or missiles. Hezbollah and
Israel have traded fire almost daily in the year since the war in Gaza began,
and fighting has escalated.
Israel launched its
ground operation in Lebanon earlier this month with the goal of weakening
Hezbollah and pushing the militant group away from the border to allow
thousands of displaced Israelis to return to their homes.
Inside Gaza, an Israeli
airstrike killed at least 20 people including children at a school Sunday
night, according to two local hospitals. The school in Nuseirat was sheltering
some of the many Palestinians displaced by the war.
Meanwhile, explosions
hit early Monday outside Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, killing
three people and injuring about 50 others, the hospital said. Tents caught
fire, and residents of the Central Gaza community carried the injured into the
hospital.
Hezbollah's deadly
strike in Israel came the same day that the United States announced it would
send a new air-defense system to Israel to help bolster protection against
missiles, along with troops needed to operate it. An Israeli army spokesperson
declined to provide a timeline.
Israel is now at war
with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon - both Iran-backed militant groups
- and is expected to strike Iran in retaliation for a missile attack earlier
this month. Iran has said it will respond to any Israeli attack.
Netanyahu calls UN
peacekeepers 'human shield' for Hezbollah
The U.N. peacekeeping
force in Lebanon known as UNIFIL said Israeli tanks forcibly entered the gates
of one position early Sunday and destroyed the main gate. They later fired
smoke rounds near peacekeepers, causing skin irritation. UNIFIL called the
incident a "further flagrant violation of international law."
International criticism
is growing after Israeli forces have repeatedly fired on U.N. peacekeepers
since the start of the ground operation in Lebanon. Five peacekeepers have been
wounded in attacks that struck their positions, with most blamed on Israeli
forces.
Stephane Dujarric,
spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, called Sunday's incident
"deeply worrying" and said attacks against peacekeepers may
constitute a war crime.
Israel's military says
Hezbollah operates in the peacekeepers' vicinity, without providing evidence.
Military officials said
a tank trying to evacuate wounded soldiers backed into a U.N. post Sunday while
under fire. A smoke screen was used to provide cover, they said.
Army spokesman Lt. Col.
Nadav Shoshani asserted that Israel has tried to maintain constant contact with
UNIFIL, and any instance of U.N. forces being harmed will be investigated at
"the highest level."
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu on Sunday called for UNIFIL to heed Israel's warnings to evacuate,
accusing them of "providing a human shield" to Hezbollah.
"We regret the
injury to the UNIFIL soldiers, and we are doing everything in our power to
prevent this injury. But the simple and obvious way to ensure this is simply to
get them out of the danger zone," he said in a video addressed to the U.N.
secretary-general, who has been banned from entering Israel.
Israel has long accused
the United Nations of being biased against it, and relations have plunged
further since the start of the war in Gaza.
Israeli strike in
Lebanon destroys Ottoman-era market
Hezbollah began firing
rockets into Israel a day after Hamas' surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7,
2023, drawing retaliatory airstrikes. The conflict escalated in September with
Israeli strikes that killed Hezbollah's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and most of
his senior commanders.
Israel launched a ground
operation earlier this month. More than 1,400 people have been killed in
Lebanon since September, according to Lebanon's Health Ministry, which does not
say how many were Hezbollah fighters. At least 58 people have been killed in
rocket attacks on Israel, nearly half of them soldiers.
Israeli airstrikes
overnight destroyed an Ottoman-era market in Lebanon's southern city of
Nabatiyeh, killing at least one person and wounding four.
"Our livelihoods
have all been leveled," said Ahmad Fakih, whose shop was destroyed.
Rescuers searched pancaked buildings as Israeli drones buzzed overhead.
The Israeli military
said it struck Hezbollah targets, without elaborating, and said it continued to
target the militants on Sunday.
Separately, the Lebanese
Red Cross said paramedics were searching for casualties in a house destroyed by
an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon when a second strike left four
paramedics with concussions and damaged two ambulances.
The Red Cross said the
operation had been coordinated with U.N. peacekeepers, who informed the Israeli
side.
Bodies rot in the
streets in northern Gaza
Israel continues to
strike what it says are militant targets in Gaza almost daily. The military
says it tries to avoid harming civilians and blames their deaths on Hamas and
other armed groups because they operate in densely populated areas.
In northern Gaza,
Israeli air and ground forces have been attacking Jabaliya, where the military
says militants have regrouped. Over the past year, Israeli forces have
repeatedly returned to the built-up refugee camp, which dates to the 1948 war
surrounding Israel's creation, and other areas.
Israel has ordered the
full evacuation of northern Gaza, including Gaza City. An estimated 400,000
people remain in the north after a mass evacuation ordered in the war's opening
weeks.
Palestinians fear Israel
intends to permanently depopulate the north to establish military bases or
Jewish settlements there.
The United Nations says
no food has entered northern Gaza since Oct. 1.
The military confirmed
that hospitals were included in evacuation orders but said it had not set a
timetable and was working with local authorities to facilitate patient
transfers.
Fares Abu Hamza, an
official with the Gaza Health Ministry's emergency service, said the bodies of
a "large number of martyrs" remain uncollected from the streets and
under rubble.
"We are unable to
reach them," he said, asserting that dogs are eating some remains.
The war began when
Hamas-led militants attacked a year ago, killing some 1,200 people, mostly
civilians, and abducting around 250. Around 100 hostages are still held in
Gaza, a third believed to be dead.
Israel's bombardment and
its ground invasion of Gaza have killed over 42,000 Palestinians, according to
Gaza's Health Ministry, and left much of the territory in ruins. The ministry
doesn't distinguish between militants or civilians, but says women and children
make up over half the deaths.
Israel says it has
killed over 17,000 fighters, without providing evidence.
End/UNB/AP/SU