
Indonesia deploys 1,090 soldiers for UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon
Indonesia has contributed troops to UNIFIL since 2006, after the operation's mandate was expanded by the UN Security Council following the Second Lebanon War to help the Lebanese Army keep control over the south of the country, which borders Israel.
The new batch of Indonesian soldiers will replace the current group serving in the country's Garuda Contingent, which consists of 1,230 personnel and whose terms expire at the end of this month.
'Today, I am very proud to send off 1,090 selected Indonesian soldiers to join the Garuda Contingent, which is on duty in the UNIFIL Mission in Lebanon,' Indonesian Armed Forces Chief Gen. Agus Subiyanto said at a pre-departure briefing in Jakarta.
'The trust that the UN has given to Indonesia to continue sending forces for its peacekeeping operations is proof that the world recognizes the professionalism, discipline and dedication of the Indonesian Armed Forces.'
As of December 2024, UNIFIL's force consists of 10,251 peacekeepers from 48 troop-contributing countries, with Indonesia topping the list, followed by Italy and India.
'The Indonesian Army's involvement in UN peacekeeping operations is not merely a military mission, but also a humanitarian and cultural mission, and a national diplomacy at the global level,' Subiyanto said.
'I wish to remind every soldier that this mission is a sacred and noble mandate, so carry out this task as best as you can.'
UNIFIL has been patrolling the border area between Lebanon and Israel for almost 50 years.
The peacekeeping forces have been attacked multiple times by Israeli troops since Israel's invasion of Lebanon last year.
Two Indonesian soldiers were among those wounded in October when Israeli tanks entered Naqoura village — where UNIFIL headquarters is located — and began firing on peacekeepers.
'The escalating conflict between Hezbollah and Israel has been intensifying more lately. This tension has a huge impact on the south Lebanon region, where you have been assigned. For this I ask that you always prioritize safety while conducting your duties,' Subiyanto told the new batch of Indonesian peacekeepers.
'If the threat escalates and you are required to leave the area of operations, implement the contingency plan prepared by the UN.'
Indonesia is among the main troop-contributing countries in UN's global peacekeeping operations, with 2,736 soldiers serving across eight missions.
Hashtags

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


Saudi Gazette
3 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
At least 100 Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza
JERUSALEM — At least 100 Palestinians have been killed and more than 500 others injured over the past 24 hours as Israeli attacks continue across Gaza despite mounting international pressure and condemnation over its conduct of war. Eyewitnesses reported attacks in the north, near Gaza City, where Israel carried out an assault on Monday morning killing five Al Jazeera journalists which sparked a wave of criticism. The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry said that at least 69 people were killed in air strikes in various locations across the enclave, while 31 people were also targeted en route to collect aid at food distribution points. It's the latest in a series of attacks targeting the Israeli-backed US aid operation, an initiative launched with the hopes of replacing traditional UN systems. The initiative, run by the Delaware-based Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), has been the site of repeated assaults, which eyewitnesses have attributed to Israeli says its troops only fire warning shots and deny targeting civilians deliberately. The IDF is not physically policing any of the GHF sites, which operates its own security apparatus, but it does secure the perimeters within a two-kilometre GHF denies any incidents of fatal violence taking place at their sites, though have confirmed that their security personnel have on "rare instances" deployed tear gas to quell unrest and skirmishes in the US firm insists that its operations in Gaza, which started in late May, have been highly successful, and are delivering millions of meals daily, claims which could not be independently verified as third-party witnesses are not involved in the US-Israeli delivery United Nations continues to be frozen out of aid operations in Gaza after Israel accused the organisation's branches, primarily UNRWA, of being infiltrated by Hamas operatives assisting in the looting and reselling of operations have been significantly reduced with the emergence of the GHF operation, after Israel claimed, without providing evidence, that Hamas fighters are stealing aid convoys for their personal consumption and to sell in black markets to continue to "finance its war machine".The lack of UN aid operations has contributed to a worsening humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. The UN estimates that at least 90% of Gaza's 2 million population are at risk of estimates are supported by the increasing number of malnutrition-related fatalities. The Gaza Health Ministry says five Palestinians died on Monday from starvation, bringing the total number of famine-related deaths to 227, including 103 Israel-Hamas war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages are still being held, although fewer than half of them are believed to be subsequent offensive resulted in the deaths of over 61,500 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, whose figures do not distinguish between fighters and Israeli military says nearly 900 of its soldiers have died since the start of the the United Kingdom has issued a joint statement with 27 partners, many of them European, denouncing the humanitarian suffering in Gaza, rising famine levels and restrictions faced by non-governmental organisations."The humanitarian suffering in Gaza has reached unimaginable levels. Famine is unfolding before our eyes. Urgent action is needed now to halt and reverse starvation. Humanitarian space must be protected, and aid should never be politicised," said the statement."We call on the government of Israel to provide authorisation for all international NGO aid shipments and to unblock essential humanitarian actors from operating. Immediate, permanent and concrete steps must be taken to facilitate safe, large-scale access for the UN, international NGOs and humanitarian partners," it joint statement was signed by the foreign ministers of Australia, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Japan, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, EU Commissioner for the Mediterranean Dubravka Šuica and EU Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management Hadja Lahbib were also signatories. — Euronews


Saudi Gazette
4 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Anas Al-Sharif — The face of the war in Gaza for millions
JERUSALEM — As a ceasefire in Gaza took hold in January, Anas Al-Sharif began removing his protective gear live on television, piece by piece, while a jubilant crowd cheered, hoping the day marked the end of the suffering of 2 million Palestinians in the enclave. Nearly seven months later, Israel killed the Al Jazeera journalist and four of his colleagues in a strike in Gaza City. One of the most well-known Palestinian journalists in Gaza – and one of dozens to be killed by Israel during the war – Al-Sharif's death has ignited international condemnation and calls for accountability. The 28-year-old rose to prominence as the face of the Gaza story for millions while Israel has blocked international media outlets from accessing the territory. Little known before the war, he quickly turned into a household name in the Arab world for his daily coverage of the conflict and its humanitarian toll. His reports provided first-hand accounts of critical moments in the conflict, including the short-lived ceasefires in the territory, the release of Israeli hostages and harrowing stories of the starvation that have shocked the world. Al Jazeera recruited Al-Sharif in December 2023 after his social media footage of Israeli strikes in his hometown of Jabalya went viral. Then a professional cameraman, he was initially reluctant to appear on air but was persuaded by colleagues to front his reports, an experience he called 'indescribable.' 'I had never even appeared on a local channel let alone an international one,' he was cited as saying in the Sotour media outlet in February. 'The person who was happiest was my late father.' His father was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Jabalya shortly after Al-Sharif began appearing on Al Jazeera. A father of two, he appeared on the channel nearly every day since he started his job. 'We (journalists) slept in hospitals, in streets, in vehicles, in ambulances, in displacement shelters, in warehouses, with displaced people. I slept in 30 to 40 different places,' he told the outlet. After he took off his protective gear on air in January, crowds lifted him on their shoulders in celebration. 'I am taking off the helmet that tired me, and this armor that has become an extension of my body,' he said live on Al Jazeera at the time as he paid tribute to colleagues killed and injured in Israeli strikes on Gaza. Al-Sharif's reports attracted the attention of the Israeli military, which, he claimed, warned him to stop his work for Al Jazeera, a network that had already lost several staff members to Israeli actions in Gaza, including Ismail Al Ghoul, killed last year, and Hossam Shabat, killed in March. 'At the end, (the Israeli military) sent me voice notes on my WhatsApp number... an intelligence officer told me... 'you have minutes to leave the location you are in, go to the south, and stop reporting for Al Jazeera'... I was reporting from a hospital live.' 'Minutes later, the room I was reporting from was struck,' he said. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) didn't respond to CNN's request for comment. Israel first accused Al-Sharif of being linked to Hamas 10 months ago. Why it decided to target him now is unclear. In a statement confirming his targeted killing, the IDF accused Al-Sharif of leading a Hamas cell in Gaza that orchestrated 'rocket attacks against Israeli civilians and IDF forces.' In October 2024, the Israeli military published documents it claimed showed 'unequivocal proof' of Al-Sharif's ties to Hamas and named five other Al Jazeera journalists who it said were part of the militant group. An Israeli army spokesperson said in a video on X that Al-Sharif joined a Hamas battalion in 2013, and was injured in training in 2017, an accusation denied by the journalist himself and Irene Khan, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression. 'I reaffirm: I, Anas Al-Sharif, am a journalist with no political affiliations. My only mission is to report the truth from the ground – as it is, without bias,' he wrote last month. 'At a time when a deadly famine is ravaging Gaza, speaking the truth has become, in the eyes of the occupation, a threat.' Following the journalist's killing, the IDF's Arabic spokesperson published several pictures of Al-Sharif with Yahya Sinwar, the late Hamas leader who is believed to have masterminded the October 7, 2023 attack that left around 1,200 people in Israel dead and roughly 250 more taken hostage. Israel killed Sinwar in October 2024. Al-Sharif was in a tent with other journalists near the entrance to the Al-Shifa Hospital when he was killed on Sunday, according to hospital director Dr. Mohammad Abu Salmiya. The tent was marked with a 'Press' sign, Abu Salmiya told CNN. The strike killed at least seven people, Salmiya added. Al Jazeera said correspondent Mohammed Qreiqeh and photojournalists Ibrahim Al Thaher and Moamen Aliwa were also killed in the strike, as well as Mohammed Noufal, another staff member. Al-Sharif's killing prompted condemnations from rights groups and officials. The Committee to Protect Journalists said it was 'appalled,' adding that Israel has 'a longstanding, documented pattern of accusing journalists of being terrorists without providing any credible proof.' The CPJ said 192 journalists have been killed since the beginning of the war nearly two years ago, adding: '184 of those journalists are Palestinians killed by Israel.' Since the start of the war, Israel has not allowed international journalists to enter Gaza to report independently. Just hours before the strike that killed Al-Sharif and his colleagues, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said foreign journalists would now be allowed into Gaza, but only with Israeli military approval and accompanied by them, the same embed policy that has been in place since the beginning of the war. Al Jazeera, based in Qatar, is one of the few global news outlets broadcasting live from Gaza during the conflict, unlike others that primarily rely on local freelance journalists. As one of the most watched channels in the Arab world, its continuous coverage of Gaza has drawn a significant viewership among Palestinians and Arabic-speaking audiences. The network's YouTube channel has more than 21 million subscribers and nearly 16 billion views, with a live stream that attracts millions of viewers Al-Sharif gained prominence in the network as many of its well-known journalists in Gaza were killed or injured by Israeli strikes. Wael Al Dahdouh, the former Gaza bureau chief, was evacuated to Qatar after sustaining injuries and having most of his family killed. Al-Sharif then emerged as a roving reporter across Gaza, providing Al Jazeera with live updates from the north of the enclave. He also regularly posted videos on his Telegram channel highlighting the toll of the war on Palestinians. Last year, Israel banned the Al Jazeera from operating in the country under a sweeping new wartime law that allows the Israeli government to ban foreign media organizations it deems 'harmful' to the nation's security. Al-Sharif was buried in Gaza on Monday in a funeral that attracted large crowds of Palestinian mourners. Anticipating his own death, Al-Sharif had written a will that was released by his colleagues after he was killed. 'I have lived through pain in all its details, tasted suffering and loss many times, yet I never once hesitated to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification... If I die, I die steadfast upon my principles,' he wrote. 'Do not forget Gaza ... and do not forget me in your sincere prayers for forgiveness and acceptance.' — CNN


Arab News
4 hours ago
- Arab News
UN warns many Yemeni children die from hunger, calls for urgent action
DUBAI: Many children in Yemen are dying from hunger rather than direct conflict, the UN Security Council was told on Tuesday, with half of the country's children under the age of five suffering from acute malnutrition. UN Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Joyce Msuya said the situation underscored the need for increased funding to ensure food access and prevent further loss of life. Also addressing the Council, UN Special Envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, described the humanitarian conditions as 'untenable' and urged intensified efforts to support de-escalation and secure a ceasefire. He also welcomed recent decisions by Yemen's Central Bank in Aden to halt the deterioration of the currency, calling economic stability key to easing hardship. Grundberg appealed to the Houthis to immediately and unconditionally release detained UN staff, stressing that protecting humanitarian workers is essential to delivering aid effectively. Both officials warned that tackling Yemen's economic collapse, protecting civilians, and sustaining humanitarian relief are as critical as ending the fighting to safeguard the country's future.