SNP announces killing of two of its fighters in Nabatieh
The Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SNP) announced on Monday the death of two of its fighters, Mohammad Ali Hammoud and Mohammad Khodor Slim, who were killed whilst carrying out “their national duty to defend Lebanon against the enemy” in the Nabatieh-Shaqif area.
South Lebanon: Israel blows up homes in Bint Jbeil
This morning in southern Lebanon, the Israeli army used explosives to destroy several homes in the town of Bint Jbeil and in the village of Tiri (both in the district of Bint Jbeil), reports our correspondent in southern Lebanon.
In the district of Nabatieh, Israeli artillery fire targeted Kfar Tibnit and Nabatieh Fawqa, whilst Israel targeted the village of Sharkieh with airstrikes.
Eight rockets fired from Lebanon landed in Ain Ebel this morning, according to the deputy mayor
Eight rockets, allegedly fired from Lebanon by Hezbollah, landed in Ain Ibl, a Christian border village still inhabited in the Bint Jbeil district, the deputy mayor, Tony Farah, and another villager told L'Orient-Le Jour. Two projectiles landed near a house, the others in fields, according to Farah. Two further rockets landed in Hanine, a neighboring village, according to the municipal official.
One person was injured and treated by the surgeon at the Francois al-Hage military and civilian clinic in the neighboring village of Rmeish, in coordination with the Order of Malta, before being transferred to the Caritas clinic in Ain Ibl. “Thank God, his condition is not critical,” Farah reassured. Houses and two cars were also damaged. “There are broken windows, walls riddled with shrapnel," according to the mayor.
Read more here.
Israel announces new barrage of Iranian missiles
The Israeli army announced that a new barrage of Iranian missiles had been fired towards Israel, according to AFP.
The Houthis impose a new ‘total ban’ on ‘Israeli’ ships in the Red Sea
Yemen's Houthis, allied with Iran and Hezbollah, announced it would ban Israeli maritime navigation in the Red Sea, making Israel-linked vessels a renewed target in the waterway.
The announcement came following the resumption of strikes traded between Iran and Israel on Sunday evening after deadly Israeli airstrikes on a densely populated area of Beirut's southern suburbs.
“We consider all enemy movements to be legitimate military targets,” the movement’s spokesperson, Yahya Saree, wrote in a statement. He claimed that Houthi forces had fired a “barrage of missiles” at Tel Aviv that morning, threatening to “respond to escalation with escalation.”
Israel threatens to continue its operations ‘across Lebanon’
Israel threatened to continue its operations “across Lebanon” and “step up the pressure” on Hezbollah in a message posted by the Israeli army spokesperson last night following Iranian missile strikes on Israeli military bases in retaliation for Israeli airstrikes on Beirut's southern suburbs.
Iraq, Syria, and Iran close their airspace following missile strikes between Iran and Israel
Iraq announced last night that it was temporarily closing its airspace, as did Syria (partially), following Iranian missile strikes on Israel. The Iraqi Civil Aviation Authority announced a 72-hour closure, whilst the Syrian authority opted to close its "southern air corridors" for 12 hours and suspend operations at Damascus International Airport.
Flights at Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Airport, one of the Iranian capital’s two main airports, were also suspended following Iran’s attack on Israel, for the first time since the cease-fire in the Middle East, the Iranian news agency Mehr reported last night.
“The civil aviation authority has announced the suspension of all flights to the airport until further notice,” according to the agency. The airport had reopened in April after weeks of closure due to the war triggered by U.S.-Israeli strikes on Feb. 28.
Araghchi held talks with his British and French counterparts
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi held talks last night on the “latest developments” in the Middle East with his counterparts from the United Kingdom, France, Turkey, and Egypt, as well as with the Pakistani mediator and the Prime Minister of Qatar.
These separate talks with the British and Turkish foreign ministers, Yvette Cooper and Hakan Fidan, as well as with the commander of the Pakistani army, Field Marshal Asim Munir, focused on “Iran’s response to the repeated violations of the cease-fire in Lebanon by the Zionist regime,” according to a statement from the Iranian Foreign Ministry, which provided no further details.
The Irna news agency also reports that Araghchi held talks with his French counterpart Jean-Noël Barrot and the Prime Minister of Qatar, Mohammad bin Abdulrahman Al Thani.
Iran-Israel: Kallas says Middle East does not need an ‘escalation’
The Middle East does not need an "escalation," said the European Union’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs, Kaja Kallas, after Israel and Iran resumed mutual attacks Sunday night and Monday morning, following Israel's attacks on Beirut's southern suburbs Sunday afternoon.
“I believe the region does not need an escalation, but rather that the parties sit down at the negotiating table and reach an agreement,” she said in Nicosia ahead of an informal meeting of EU defense ministers.
Hormuz strait will be open but with transit fees, Iran envoy to Moscow quoted
The Strait of Hormuz will be open but under new conditions to be set by Iran and Oman, including a transit fee, Iran's ambassador to Moscow was quoted as saying on Monday.
The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has largely cut oil flows via the strait, which before the conflict saw one-fifth of the world's oil pass through. Several tankers have managed to leave the Gulf recently, but oil and liquefied natural gas flows are still severely constrained.
"Of course, this strait will be open, but with new conditions to be determined by the Iranian and Omani authorities," Ambassador Kazem Jalali told the Russian newspaper Izvestia in an interview published on Monday.
Yemen's Houthis say they will ban Israeli maritime navigation in the Red Sea
Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthis said on Monday that they would ban Israeli maritime navigation in the Red Sea, reported Reuters.
They also said in a statement that they had attacked Israel.
Israel hits Iran petrochemical plant in new strikes despite Trump reprimand
Israel hit a petrochemical plant in Iran's southwest on Monday morning, along with strikes elsewhere on military targets, according to an Israeli military brief.
In the first hit on an energy site inside Iran since the April 8 cease-fire, Israel said it struck targets at the Mahshahr petrochemical complex, while a provincial official told Iran's Fars news agency parts of the plant were damaged.
U.S. President Donald Trump had reportedly told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refrain from further attacks after Iran struck Israel's Nevatim and Tel Nof military bases on Sunday, causing air raid sirens to ring across Israel and a nation-wide shut down of schools announced for Monday.
Read more here.
Hello and welcome to our live news blog
Hello and welcome to our rolling coverage of news in Lebanon, where Israel targeted Beirut's densely populated southern suburbs Sunday, killing at least two people and wounding 20 others.
A few hours following these deadly attacks, Iran retaliated by targeting two military bases in Israel, re-asserting its goal to align the Lebanon-Iran fronts in bringing U.S.-Israeli hostilities to a permanent halt.
This morning, Israel claimed an attack on an Iranian petrochemical plant.
Catch up with yesterday's live blog here and our Morning Brief here for everything you might have missed and what to expect today.
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