Israel says it carried out ground raid into Syria, seizing a Syrian citizen connected to Iran
UNB
Publish: 04 Nov 2024, 12:12 PM
JERUSALEM (AP.UNB) - The Israeli military said Sunday it has carried out
a ground raid into Syria, seizing a Syrian citizen involved in Iranian
networks. It was the first time in the current war that Israel announced its
troops operated in Syrian territory.
Syria did not immediately
confirm the announcement.
Israel has carried out
airstrikes in Syria multiple times over the past year, targeting members of
Lebanon's Hezbollah and officials from Iran, the close ally of both Hezbollah
and Syria. But it has not previously made public any ground forays into Syria.
The Israeli military said
the seizure was part of a special operation "that took place in recent
months," though it did not say exactly when it occurred.
The disclosure of the raid
comes as Israel has waged an escalated campaign of bombardment in Lebanon for
the past six weeks, as well as a ground invasion along the countries' shared
border, vowing to cripple Hezbollah, On Saturday, an Israeli military official
said naval forces carried out a raid in a northern Lebanese town, seizing a man
they called a senior Hezbollah operative.
The army in its statement
Sunday did not specify where in Syria the raid took place or when. It
identified the man it seized as Ali Soleiman al-Assi, saying he lives in the
southern Syrian region of Saida. It said the man had been under military
surveillance for many months and was involved in Iranian initiatives targeting
areas of the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights near the border with Syria.
Body camera footage of the
raid released by the army showed soldiers seizing a man in a white tank top
inside a building. The man was brought to Israel for interrogation, the
military said.
Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu visited the border with Lebanon on Sunday, saying his focus
was trying to keep Hezbollah from rearming itself through the "oxygen
lifeline" of Iranian weapons transferred to Lebanon via Syria. Israel says
its campaign in Lebanon aims to push Hezbollah away from the border and put an end
to more than a year of fire by the group into northern Israel.
Israel's strikes in Lebanon
have killed more than 2,500 people over the past year. In Israel, 69 people
have been killed by Hezbollah projectiles.
Meanwhile, Israeli forces
continued their campaign in Gaza. In the southern part of the territory, an
Israeli strike hit a group of people gathered outside in an eastern district of
Khan Younis, killing at least eight Palestinians, including four children and a
woman, the Gaza Health Ministry's emergency services said. The city's Nasser
Hospital, which received most of the bodies, confirmed the figures.
Palestinian officials said
an Israeli drone strike on Saturday hit a clinic in northern Gaza where
children were being vaccinated for polio, wounding six people including four
children. The Israeli military denied responsibility.
Dr. Munir al-Boursh,
director general of the Gaza Health Ministry, told The Associated Press that a
quadcopter struck the Sheikh Radwan clinic in Gaza City early Saturday afternoon,
just a few minutes after a United Nations delegation left the facility.
The World Health
Organization and the U.N. children's agency, known as UNICEF, which are jointly
carrying out the polio vaccination campaign, expressed concern over the reported
strike.
"The reports of this
attack are even more disturbing as the Sheikh Radwan Clinic is one of the
health points where parents can get their children vaccinated," said
Rosalia Bollen, a spokesperson for UNICEF.
"Today's attack
occurred while the humanitarian pause was still in effect, despite assurances
given that the pause would be respected from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m."
Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, an
Israeli military spokesman, said that "contrary to the claims, an initial
review determined that the (Israeli military) did not strike in the area at the
specified time."
It was not possible to
resolve the conflicting accounts. Israeli forces have repeatedly raided
hospitals in Gaza over the course of the war, saying Hamas uses them for
militant purposes, allegations denied by Palestinian health officials. Hamas
fighters are also operating in the north, battling Israeli forces.
Northern Gaza has been
encircled by Israeli forces and largely isolated for the past year. Israel has
been carrying out another offensive there in recent weeks that has killed
hundreds of people and displaced tens of thousands.
A scaled-down campaign to
administer a second dose of the polio vaccine began Saturday in parts of
northern Gaza. It had been postponed from Oct. 23 due to lack of access,
Israeli bombings and mass evacuation orders, and the lack of assurances for
humanitarian pauses, a U.N. statement said.
The administration of the
first dose was carried out in September across the Gaza Strip, including areas
of northern Gaza that are now completely sealed off. Health officials said the
campaign's first round, and the administration of the second dose across
central and southern Gaza, were successful.
At least 100,000 people
have been forced to evacuate from areas of north Gaza toward Gaza City in the
past few weeks, but around 15,000 children under the age of 10 remain in
northern towns, including Jabaliya, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun, which are inaccessible,
according to the U.N.
The final phase of the
polio vaccination campaign had aimed to reach an estimated 119,000 children in
the north with a second dose of the oral polio vaccine, the agencies said, but
"achieving this target is now unlikely due to access constraints."
They say 90% of children in
every community must be vaccinated to prevent the spread of the disease.
The campaign was launched
after the first polio case was reported in Gaza in 25 years - a 10-month-old
boy, now paralyzed in the leg. The World Health Organization said the presence
of a paralysis case indicates there could be hundreds more who have been
infected but aren't showing symptoms.
The war began on Oct. 7,
2023, when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel, killing some 1,200
people, mostly civilians, and abducting another 250. Israel's offensive has
killed over 43,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, who do
not say how many were combatants but say more than half were women and children.
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