The leaders of France, Italy and Spain have condemned “unjustifiable” Israeli attacks that have hit the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon amid heightened conflict in the region.
In a joint statement, the three EU countries, which contribute troops to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) expressed “outrage” as they accused Israel of seriously violating its obligations under humanitarian international law and said such attacks should “immediately come to an end”.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Spanish counterpart Pedro Sanchez joined Emmanuel Macron in condemning what the French president called Israel’s “deliberate targeting” of UNIFIL soldiers.
“We condemn it, we do not tolerate it and we do not tolerate it happening again,” Mr Macron said.
US President Joe Biden said he was asking close ally in the region Israel not to strike UNIFIL forces and Downing Street said it was “appalled” by reports that Israel deliberately fired on peacekeepers.
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0:39
UNIFIL spokesperson discusses Israeli attacks
UNIFIL said an Israeli tank fired on its headquarters in the town of Naqoura in southern Lebanon on Thursday, hitting an observation tower and wounding two peacekeepers.
The peacekeeping force said its headquarters were affected by further explosions on Friday which injured two peacekeepers. One was taken to hospital.
The Israeli military on Friday expressed “deep concern” and said two peacekeepers, believed to be from Sri Lanka, had been injured by Israeli fire as it was engaging with Hezbollah fighters.
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Image: Rescue workers search for victims at the site of Thursday’s Israeli airstrike in Beirut. Pic: AP
The Italian defence ministry summoned Israel’s ambassador in protest, and Ireland’s Prime Minister Simon Harris said he was deeply concerned, with the Irish Defence Forces serving with UNIFIL. He said all Irish troops in the south of Lebanon were accounted for.
UN secretary general Antonio Guterres has also condemned the incidents.
Andrea Tenenti, a spokesperson for UNIFIL, told Sky News his peacekeepers have been attacked four times in the last 48 hours.
“Even the secretary general yesterday was very vocal,” he said. “This is a violation of international humanitarian law, attacking peacekeepers in peacekeeping operations.”
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Mr Tenenti said the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) asked peacekeepers to move away from the “blue line” – a dividing line between Lebanon and Israel and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights – where peacekeepers were tasked with reducing tensions by a UN resolution.
But UNIFIL decided to stay to provide humanitarian support to thousands of people stuck in the south, he said.
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Following the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, UN Resolution 1701 was designed to allow peacekeepers to help the Lebanese army keep the south of Lebanon free of weapons and armed personnel other than those of the Lebanese state.
The area they were instructed to operate within extends from the Israeli border and the Golan Heights to the Litani river.
The conflict between Israel and Hezbollah erupted a year ago when the Iranian-backed group started launching rockets at northern Israel in support of Palestinian militant group Hamas, at the beginning of the Gaza war.
It has intensified in recent weeks, with Israel bombing southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs and the Bekaa Valley, killing many of Hezbollah’s top leaders, and sending ground troops across the border.
Hezbollah, for its part, has fired rockets deeper into Israel.
An Israeli strike overnight on Thursday in the heart of Beirut killed 22 people and wounded 139, Lebanese caretaker prime minister Najib Mikati said.
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2:29
Scores killed in central Beirut strike
Lebanon’s army said two of its soldiers were killed and three others were wounded when Israeli forces hit a building near one of its military posts in Kafra in the south.
Israel said its campaign in Lebanon aims to make northern Israel safe for tens of thousands of people who were forced to leave over the last year by Hezbollah rocket fire.
More than 1.2 million people have been displaced by Israel’s expanded operation, according to the Lebanese government, which said more than 2,100 people have been killed and over 10,000 wounded in the fighting.
Meanwhile, Israeli military strikes killed at least 61 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Friday, medics told Reuters.
Nearly half of the deaths happened in Jabalia – Gaza’s largest refugee camp. Medecins Sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders, has warned that thousands of people are trapped in the camp as Israel attacks the area.
The Israeli military said it has killed dozens of militants in Jabalia.
An Irish politician who was detained in Egypt trying to cross into Gaza says the police were violent towards the group after seizing his phone.
People Before Profit-Solidarity TD (MP) Paul Murphy was part of a large demonstration attempting to march to the Rafah crossing in a bid to get aid into the region.
The opposition politician said his phone and passport were confiscated on Friday before he was put on a bus to Cairo airport for deportation.
Footage of the seconds before his phone was seized shows authorities forcibly dragging protesters away from the sit-down demonstration.
Ireland’s deputy premier said several Irish citizens who were detained have now been released. Mr Murphy confirmed he was among the released protesters, posting a photo on his Facebook page saying he was back in Cairo and “meeting shortly to decide next steps”.
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In a message from Mr Murphy after he was detained, posted online by his social media team, he said: “I’m ok, but they still have my phone.
“Egyptian police say we’re going to airport but this isn’t the road we came on because there are 1000s of marchers on the streets. They’re taking us south past a lake, then west towards Cairo.
“Violence got worse after they seized my phone.
“One American woman in my group was badly kicked & beaten, and had her hijab torn off.”
Sky News has contacted Egypt’s police regarding Mr Murphy’s claims of violence towards the group.
Mr Murphy previously said other Irish citizen were among those who had been stopped from entering Gaza.
“The world has watched a horrific genocide for the past 20 months. Since March, a total attempt of starvation,” he added.
“And that this is a peaceful march to demand that it be ended and demand that western governments stop their complicity.”
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Mr Murphy’s partner, Councillor Jess Spear, had previously appealed to Ireland’s Foreign Affairs Minister and deputy premier Simon Harris to make a public statement on Mr Murphy’s detention.
She expressed “relief” that the group had been released from detention.
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3:59
The deadly road to Gaza aid point
She said: “However, they still want to reach Rafah to try and get humanitarian aid into Gaza. That has been the sole purpose of being in Egypt.
“Paul has appealed to Tanaiste Simon Harris to put pressure on the Egyptian authorities to let the marchers reach Rafah. The situation of the people of Gaza worsens by the day as they suffer starvation imposed by Israel.”
Because, hours after his country launched its first, surprise attack, the message from Benjamin Netanyahu couldn’t be clearer – Iranians, he said, should overthrow their “evil and oppressive regime”. He said Israel’s attack would “pave the way for you to achieve your freedom”.
On the one hand, he would say that, wouldn’t he? The Iranian government does not recognise the legitimacy of the Israeli state and has called for its destruction, while funding proxy groups that have attacked Israel– including Hamas, Lebanese Hezbollah, and the Houthis in Yemen.
But perhaps this time there is more than just wishful thinking.
Although it’s very hard to gauge the level of opposition in Iran, it seems likely the majority of the population of 90 million are at least disenchanted with the regime.
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0:56
Netanyahu calls on Iranians to help “thwart” Tehran regime
Living standards have fallen and supplies are running short. While tens of billions of dollars have been spent on a nuclear programme, electricity is being rationed and cooking gas is running low.
Priority is being given to those who are close to the regime, notably the members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), a branch of the Iranian army that is fiercely loyal to the ruling regime.
The IRGC are crucial in propping up Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s 86-year-old supreme leader. Not only do they offer military power, but also domestic surveillance, intimidation and secret policing in order to stifle dissent.
So for any opposition to emerge, let alone flourish, the IRGC would need to be degraded – and that is precisely what Israel has done, targeting its senior leaders as well as bases.
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The regular army, so far, has been left alone. Israel’s gamble is that a majority of the rest of the military harbour the same dislike of the IRGC as the wider population.
It was no coincidence that Netanyahu quoted the expression “woman, life, freedom”, which was a rallying call during the 2022 protests in Iran – eventually suppressed by the IRGC.
It is very hard to believe that a coherent, public opposition movement will burst into life any time soon. Iranians are well aware their regime will respond with brutality against any attempted uprising.
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2:31
Iranian ballistic missile strikes Israel
Instead, dissidents seem to be biding their time and waiting to see if Israel continues its assaults, and whether they can sense genuine signs that the regime is starting to struggle to maintain control. If the cracks emerge, then regime change – or at least an attempt – is possible.
Possible, but not certain. “They will do anything to stay in power, and when other uprisings have happened, they’ve been successfully suppressed,” one Middle East diplomat tells me.
“And there is no unifying leader ready to step in. Even if there is regime change, it could be a military takeover rather than a popular uprising.”
And that leaves one final question – if Khamenei did feel his grip on power was failing, might he still have the time, desire and power to resort to final, desperate military actions? The truth is, we don’t know.
At the moment, the Middle East is a region full of unanswerable, high-risk questions.
A father returning home after scattering his wife’s ashes was among the victims of the Air India crash, leaving his two young children suddenly orphaned.
Flight 171 was carrying 242 people when it struck a medical college hostel less than a minute after taking off from Ahmedabad airport, in western India.
Twenty-nine people on the ground were killed, taking the total number of victims to 270. A hospital official confirmed 270 bodies have been recovered from the crash site, but DNA testing is being conducted to identify the bodies.
Among the victims, 37-year-old Arjun Patoliya had been visiting India to fulfil his wife Bharti’s “final wish” to be laid to rest in her hometown of Gujarat.
Bharti had died just over two weeks ago, following a “courageous battle with cancer”.
A GoFundMe page, set up to raise funds for their two children, says: “Arjun left to bid farewell to his wife, never returned to the children they both raised.
“Now, these two beautiful young girls have been left without parents – their world turned upside down in just over two weeks.”
A fundraiser, which has topped more than a quarter of a million pounds, confirms all money raised will go directly into a legal trust, “to ensure every penny is dedicated to the girls’ needs”.
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India’s aviation minister has said a government panel reviewing the crash will complete its assessment in three months.
Ram Mohan Naidu said the government has also ordered “extended surveillance” of Boeing 787 planes. Air India operates 33 Boeing 787s, while rival airline IndiGo has one, according to data from Flightradar24.
Mr Naidu said the plane started descending after reaching 650 feet.
Every theory as to what happened will be looked into, he said. But in the meantime, he has instructed the airline to assist the families of passengers to ensure there is no delay in handing over the bodies of those who died.
Black box has been found
India’s aviation ministry says workers have recovered the digital flight data recorder – one of two black boxes on the plane, from the rooftop of the building where it crashed.
This box has data on engine and control settings, so will be able to show if there was a loss of engine power or lift after takeoff.
The investigation will initially focus on the engine, flaps and landing gear, a source told Reuters on Friday.
A possible bird-hit is not among the key areas of focus, the source said, adding that teams of anti-terror experts were part of the investigation process.
There is no information yet on the cockpit voice recorder, the other black box, which will be a crucial part of understanding what caused the plane to crash.