BEIRUT: Hezbollah said Saturday its fighters were confronting Zionist troops in Lebanon’s southern border region, where Zionist military said it struck militants from inside a mosque. Rapidly escalating violence in recent days saw intense airstrikes on Hezbollah strongholds across Lebanon as ground troops conducted raids near the border, transforming nearly a year of cross-border exchanges into full-blown war.

In the first reported Zionist airstrike on the northern Tripoli region in the current flare-up, Palestinian militant group Hamas said "Zionist bombardment” of the Beddawi refugee camp killed a commander, Saeed Attallah Ali, as well as his wife and two daughters on Saturday. The escalation, which this week included Iran’s second-ever missile attack on Zionist entity, intensifying Hezbollah rocket fire and strikes claimed by Iran allies from as far away as Yemen, comes just days before the first anniversary of October 7 attack.

A military official said the army was "preparing a response” to Iran’s "unlawful” attack, without elaborating. In downtown Beirut, Ibrahim Nazzal, who is among hundreds of thousands displaced by the violence, said: "We want the war to stop... all our homes are gone.” Nearly a year into the war in the Gaza Strip triggered by the unprecedented attack, Zionists have shifted their focus north, aiming to allow tens of thousands of people displaced by Hezbollah rocket fire to return home.

Zionist military launched an intensified wave of strikes on Hezbollah strongholds around Lebanon, killing more than 1,110 people since September 23. On the ground, Hezbollah said its fighters were engaged in clashes with Zionist troops in the border area, later claiming a rocket attack at north, some 45 kilometers from the frontier. The military said its forces had killed 250 Hezbollah fighters in the border area this week, and early Saturday struck a militant "command centre located inside a mosque” in the town of Bint Jbeil.

GAZA: A Palestinian boy looks at shrouded bodies after a Zionist airsrike on Gaza City’s Zaytoun neighborhood on October 5, 2024. – AFP

Peacekeepers ‘remain’

Zionist recent attacks on Lebanon have killed an Iranian general, a host of Hezbollah commanders and, in the biggest blow to the group in decades, its leader, Hassan Nasrallah. Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, delivering a rare public address on Friday, said that "the resistance in the region will not back down with these martyrdoms”. As Zionist entity mulls its response to the Iranian missile attack on Tuesday, US President Joe Biden cautioned against striking Iranian oil facilities, a day after he said Washington was "discussing” such action.

The Iranian attack, which Tehran called revenge for the assassination of Nasrallah and other top figures, killed one person in the occupied West Bank. According to satellite pictures, it also caused some damage to Nevatim air base in southern part of Zionist entity. In Lebanon, bombardment has put at least four hospitals out of service, and on Friday, the first delivery of medical aid organized by the United Nations reached Beirut airport.

The state-run National News Agency said that about a dozen strikes hit the Lebanese capital’s southern suburbs overnight, with a fresh raid on Saturday around noon. It also reported more Zionist airstrikes on Lebanon’s south and east. In Hezbollah’s south Beirut bastion, an AFP photographer saw some buildings reduced to rubble and fire raging in another. In a nearby neighborhood, 62-year-old cook Abu Abbas told AFP he has kept his small eatery open "every morning”. "Even with the strikes that are becoming increasingly heavy each night... I cannot leave home,” he said.

Lebanon said an airstrike on Friday cut off the main international road to Syria, which was used by many seeking refuge across the border. Zionist entity said it aimed to prevent the flow of weapons. The United Nations said its peacekeepers "remain in all positions” in south Lebanon despite a Zionist request on Monday to "relocate” as the military’s ground incursions began. The UN Interim Force in Lebanon also urged commitment "in actions, not just words” to Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Zionists and Hezbollah and stipulated that only the Lebanese army and peacekeepers should be deployed in south Lebanon.

‘Great force’

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, visiting Damascus on Saturday after a stop in Beirut, said: "The most important issue today is the ceasefire, especially in Lebanon and in Gaza.” Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, whose war-torn country has also endured Zionist attacks mostly targeting Iran-backed groups, told Araghchi that the Iranian missile attack was "a strong response” that had "taught the Zionist entity a lesson”. Biden said the United States, Zionist entity’s top military supplier, was working to "rally the rest of the world” to prevent the fighting from spreading even further.

US, Qatari and Egyptian mediators tried unsuccessfully for months to reach a Gaza truce and secure the release of 97 hostages still held in the Hamas-ruled territory. Medics and rescuers said Zionist fire early Saturday killed at least 12 people across Gaza. The Palestinian Red Crescent said a child was killed in "a missile attack” that hit a makeshift displacement camp near a central Gaza school, where the military said it targeted militants.

Zionist military offensive has killed at least 41,825 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to figures provided by the territory’s health ministry and described as reliable by the UN. In the first such order in weeks, the military told Palestinians to evacuate the area around the strategic Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza, warning that troops were preparing to use "great force” against Hamas fighters there. The war has already displaced the vast majority of the territory’s 2.4 million people at least once, with Gazans repeatedly warning there was no longer anywhere safe for them.

Contact ‘lost’

Meanwhile, a high-level Hezbollah source said on Saturday that contact with Hashem Safieddine, widely touted as potentially the group’s next leader, had been lost following a Zionist airstrikes this week. "Contact with Sayyed Safieddine has been lost since the violent strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs” early on Friday, the official told AFP. "We don’t know if he was at the targeted site, or who may have been there with him,” he added.

A second source close to Hezbollah also confirmed that communication had been cut off with Safieddine and that his whereabouts were unknown. Hezbollah "is trying to reach the underground headquarters that were targeted, but every single time Zionists start striking again to impede rescue efforts,” he said. Safieddine "was with Hezbollah’s head of intelligence,” known as Hajj Murtada, when the strikes took place, he said. Both sources requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. - AFP