
Blast at weapons depot in southern Lebanon kills six soldiers
The deaths come after the Lebanese government made the historic decision this week to disarm Hezbollah and charged the army with drawing up a plan to complete the process by the end of the year.
A military statement gave a preliminary toll of six soldiers killed 'while an army unit was inspecting a weapons depot and dismantling its contents in Wadi Zibqin', in Tyre district near the Israeli border.
But a military source told AFP the blast had occurred 'inside a Hezbollah military facility'. Troops were 'removing munitions and unexploded ordnance left over from the recent war' when the blast occurred, the source added.
Under a fragile truce that ended the war between Israel and Hezbollah last year, Lebanese troops have been in charge of removing the Iran-backed group's infrastructure in the south.
Condolences poured in shortly after Saturday's incident. Prime Minister Nawaf Salam paid tribute to the troops who were killed 'while performing their national duty', calling the army the protector of Lebanon's 'unity and its legitimate institutions'.
Saudi Arabia also expressed its 'sincere condolences' to Lebanon, repeating its solidarity with the country. The kingdom has in recent months moved closer towards Lebanon.
US envoy Tom Barrack, who has led Washington's efforts to disarm Hezbollah, extended the administration's 'deepest condolences'.
The blast came days after he UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon (Unifil) said troops had discovered a 'vast network of fortified tunnels' in the same area.
UN spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters that the troops uncovered a cache of artillery, rockets, mines and improvised explosive devices.
In April, the Lebanese army said three soldiers were killed in a munitions blast, just days after another was killed in an explosion as troops dismantled mines in a tunnel.
The blast comes amid a growing push to disarm the group, sparking opposition from its supporters.
The cabinet earlier this week gave the Lebanese Armed Forces until the end of August to prepare a plan to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year. The group rejected that decision and said it would treat it as if it did not exist.
A senior adviser to Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Saturday that Tehran 'is certainly opposed to the disarmament of Hezbollah'.
'Iran has always supported the people and the resistance of Lebanon and continues to do so,' international affairs adviser Ali Akbar Velayati told Iran's Tasnim news agency.
Lebanon's Foreign Ministry slammed the comments as 'flagrant and unacceptable interference', reminding 'the leadership in Tehran that Iran would be better served by focusing on the issues of its own people'.
The US plan lists 11 'objectives' including 'ensuring the sustainability' of the ceasefire with Israel announced in November and 'the gradual end of the armed presence of all non-governmental entities, including Hezbollah, in all Lebanese territory'.
It also calls for the posting of Lebanese troops in border areas and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the five places in the south they have occupied since last year's war with Hezbollah ended with November's ceasefire.
Lebanon says Israel's continued presence and its air strikes inside Lebanese territory are a breach of the truce.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
3 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
US reacts to killing of journalists in Gaza: Israel 'is a nation fighting a war'
At the first US State Department briefing since Israel killed a team of journalists in northern Gaza on Sunday - including Al Jazeera's highest profile correspondent in the strip, Anas al-Sharif - the Trump administration appeared to brush off the attack as a mere casualty of being in a war zone before deferring to Israel for any potential investigation. While the US has "concern about the loss of any innocent life", spokesperson Tammy Bruce told reporters on Tuesday, "many of you know of someone who's been killed, who you've worked with because of a war situation". "I will remind you again that we're dealing with a complicated, horrible situation," she told a reporter from Aljazeera Arabic who asked if she was comfortable with the Israeli justification for targeting Sharif. "We refer you to Israel," she added. "Israel has released evidence al-Sharif was part of Hamas and was supportive of the Hamas attack on October 7. They're the ones who have the evidence". Sharif, a longtime Al Jazeera employee and father of two who died aged 28, had always said he had "no political affiliations". New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters But Bruce insisted that "Hamas, historically, has had members who are embedded in society, including posing as journalists". Israeli forces deliberately killed six Palestinian journalists, five of whom worked for Al Jazeera, late on Sunday in an intentional drone strike, hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected international condemnation over his plan to occupy the Palestinian enclave. The Al Jazeera Media Network said in a statement that its correspondents Sharif and Mohammed Qreiqeh, along with four other colleagues, were targeted when Israeli forces struck their tent outside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. "Anas and his colleagues were among the last remaining voices from within Gaza, providing the world with unfiltered, on-the-ground coverage of the devastating realities endured by its people," the statement read. Gaza: Online tributes pour in for Al Jazeera journalists assassinated by Israel Read More » "Through continuous, courageous live coverage, they have delivered searing eyewitness accounts of the horrors unleashed over 22 months of relentless bombing and destruction". Asked if the US would back an independent commission to look into the killings of journalists, which the Gaza media office has said totals 247 victims since 7 October 2023, Bruce brushed off any doubts that Israel can investigate itself if it needs to. "I would take issue with your premise here to say that Israel, every time, has failed to do that," she said. "This is a nation fighting a war with a terrorist group that have always used human shields, have used hospitals, have used schools... it's been just the worst example of the barbarity of human beings, if you can call them that," she said in reference to allegations against Hamas. "We call on our ally and partner, Israel, to investigate these situations. I do it from this podium. The United States does it. We expect investigations, and for a sovereign nation to engage in that. And then we'll follow up to see what those results are," Bruce said. Food aid Regarding aid allowed in by Israel, Bruce confirmed that half of the $30m pledged by the Trump administration to the scandal-plagued Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has already been distributed. 'That situation is rapidly evolving. We've been working from the beginning for a ceasefire, specifically for the reasons you've noted and that we all care about, which is the aid for the people of Gaza," she said. "Hamas has been at war with the people of Gaza. We've seen that through their refusal to stop this war," she added, despite multiple offers the group said it has made to Washington since Trump took office. GHF has so far given out 120 million meals, Bruce said. It remains unclear how the US arrives at its figures, given that Palestinians have described the rations as meagre. Not everyone makes it back alive. According to the United Nations, nearly 1,000 Palestinians have been shot dead by Israeli soldiers, quadcopters, or US military contractors at the four GHF sites in Gaza. But despite initially distancing the US government from what was meant to be a private entity, Bruce has increasingly defended the GHF. "Nothing will ever be enough in a war zone. The war zone has to stop. It has to end," she told reporters. "What I can tell you is what this administration is trying to do: Trying to stop it, finally, once and for all".


Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
US reporter criticises US media's 'complicity' in deaths of Palestinian journalists
Multimedia reporter Marina Watanabe has accused US media of being "complicit" in the deaths of five Al Jazeera staff who the Israeli military killed in an intentional drone strike while they were in a media tent stationed outside of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. In a post on X on Monday, the former LA Times reporter said the publication had prevented her and 100 of her colleagues from covering Palestine for three months: "Shortly after the Gaza genocide began, I signed an open letter demanding that Israel stop killing journalists. @latimes [LA Times] punished me and 100 of my colleagues and banned us from covering Palestine for 3 months. I will never forgive US media for its complicity in their deaths". US publications such as The New York Times, CNN and others have been under fire for inaccurate and biased reporting on Israel's war on Gaza.


Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Pen America under fire for saying targeted killing of journalist 'could' constitute war crime
Pen America has faced criticism after it said the targeted killing of five Al Jazeera staff members, including much-loved reporter Anas al-Sharif, "could" constitute a war crime. The Israeli military killed all five in a drone strike while they were stationed in a media tent beside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City late on Sunday. The literary non-profit, which says it stands at the "intersection of literature and human rights", has been largely silent about atrocities committed by Israel in Gaza, and is currently on the boycott list of Writers for the War Against Gaza.