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Regional states urge dialogue to ease South Sudan tensions

By - Aug 09,2021 - Last updated at Aug 09,2021

NAIROBI — Regional African body IGAD called on Monday on rival military factions of South Sudanese Vice President Riek Machar’s movement to open the path for dialogue after deadly fighting at the weekend.

At least 30 people were reported dead in the clashes that broke out on Saturday, just days after Machar’s foes in his SPLA-I0 said they had ousted him as party leader and head of its armed forces.

The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) called the emergency meeting of its foreign ministers, saying the current political situation in the young nation required “the urgent attention of the council”.

IGAD Executive Secretary Workneh Gebeyehu said on Twitter he had called on the warring factions to settle their differences peacefully.

“I called on SPLM/SPLA-IO leaders to open the avenues of dialogue to settle differences in a peaceful manner so as to safeguard the implementation of the revitalised agreement on the resolution of the conflict,” he said, referring to Machar’s umbrella Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army-In Opposition.

The East African bloc has been a key player in peace talks to end the young country’s five-year civil war between forces loyal to Machar and his old foe President Salva Kiir that cost almost 400,000 lives.

The latest fighting in Machar’s own movement threatens to put further pressure on the already fragile peace accord signed by the two men in 2018 and their power-sharing deal.

Each side blamed the other for launching the early morning attacks on Saturday on rival forces in Upper Nile State which borders Sudan.

Machar’s forces killed two major generals and over 27 “enemy” soldiers, and lost three of their own men, a military spokesman for Machar said.

 

Saudi Arabia to reopen borders for vaccinated umrah pilgrims

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

In this file photo taken on April 13, Muslim worshippers perform the evening Tarawih prayer during the fasting month of Ramadan around the Kaaba in the Grand Mosque complex in the holy city of Mecca (AFP photo)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia will begin accepting vaccinated foreigners wanting to make the Umrah pilgrimage, authorities said on Sunday, a move that will boost an economy hit by the COVID pandemic.

Nearly 18 months after it closed its borders to battle coronavirus, Saudi Arabia will from Monday begin "gradually receiving Umrah requests from various countries", the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

The Umrah can be undertaken at any time and usually draws millions from around the globe, unlike the annual Hajj, which abled-bodied Muslims who have the means must perform at least once in their lifetime.

The COVID-19 pandemic hugely disrupted both Muslim pilgrimages, which are usually key revenue earners for the kingdom that rake in a combined $12 billion annually.

Before Sunday’s announcement, only immunised pilgrims residing in Saudi Arabia were eligible for Umrah permits.

And last month only around 60,000 inoculated residents were allowed to take part in a scaled down form of the annual Hajj.

But the kingdom is slowly opening up, and has started welcoming vaccinated foreign tourists since August 1.

Foreign pilgrims must be immunised with a Saudi-recognised vaccine — Pfizer-BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson — and agree to undergo quarantine if necessary, the SPA said quoting Deputy Hajj Minister Abdulfattah Bin Sulaiman Mashat.

He added that the kingdom was working on determining the destinations from which pilgrims can come and their numbers on a “periodic basis according to the classification of preventive measures” in those countries.

 

Relief 

 

Barring overseas pilgrims has caused deep disappointment among Muslims worldwide, who typically save for years to take part.

“I feel relieved about the resumption of the umrah pilgrimage,” Ahmed Hamadna, 33, a sales manager in Egypt, told AFP.

But he added that he was “concerned about the complex procedures and measures during the pandemic”.

Engineer Mohamad Ragab, an Australian resident, said he too was still “hesitant” to perform the umrah pilgrimage.

“There will likely be crowds in Mecca and the chances of infection are high,” he said.

According to the SPA report, Saudi Arabia will allow 60,000 pilgrims to perform umrah each month, and gradually increase that to reach two million worshippers per month.

Hosting the pilgrimages is a matter of prestige for Saudi rulers, for whom the custodianship of Islam’s holiest sites is their most powerful source of political legitimacy.

Riyadh has spent billions trying to build a tourism industry from scratch, as part of efforts to diversify its oil-reliant economy.

The once-reclusive kingdom began issuing tourist visas for the first time in 2019 as part of an ambitious push to revamp its global image and draw visitors.

Between September 2019 and March 2020, it issued 400,000 of them — only for the pandemic to crush that momentum as borders were closed.

The government has accelerated a nationwide vaccination drive as it moves to revive tourism and other pandemic-hit sectors, such as sport competitions and entertainment extravaganzas.

Vaccination is mandatory for anyone seeking to enter government and private establishments, including education institutions and entertainment venues, as well as to use public transport.

Saudi Arabia has registered nearly 532,000 coronavirus cases and more than 8,300 deaths.

The Hajj, one of the five pillars of Islam, is usually one of the world’s largest religious gatherings, with 2.5 million taking part in 2019.

Iran’s Raisi names US-sanctioned Mokhber as first VP

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

TEHRAN — Iran’s new ultraconservative President Ebrahim Raisi on Sunday named the chairman of a powerful state-owned foundation sanctioned by the United States as his first vice president, the president’s official website said.

Mohammad Mokhber, long rumoured by local media to be top pick for the position, has for years headed the foundation known as Setad, or the Execution of Imam Khomeini’s order, in reference to the Islamic republic’s founder Ruhollah Khomeini.

Mokhber was appointed to the position by the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in 2007, following a string of official positions at the south-western province of Khuzestan.

The Setad was originally founded in the late 1980s to manage confiscated properties following the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

It has since turned into a sprawling conglomerate with stakes in various industries, including health, and its Barekat Foundation produced out Iran’s first local COVID-19 vaccine project.

The vaccine received emergency approval in June from health authorities in the Middle East’s worst-hit country.

The Setad and Mokhber were blacklisted by the US Treasury in January. Washington had said that Setad “has a stake in nearly every sector of the Iranian economy, including energy, telecommunications, and financial services”.

Raisi, who won a June 18 election marked by record abstention, takes over from moderate Hassan Rouhani.

On Thursday, Raisi took the oath of office before parliament, to which he must present a list of ministers within two weeks.

A former judiciary chief, Raisi has been criticised by the West for his human rights record and sanctioned by the US since 2019.

Raisi also picked Gholamhossein Esmaili, the judiciary’s spokesman during his tenure, as his chief of staff.

A former prosecutor, Esmaili is under sanctions by the European Union.

He was first blacklisted in 2011 as Iran’s prisons’ organisation chief over “serious human rights violations”.

Raisi’s presidency is due to consolidate power in the hands of conservatives following their 2020 parliamentary election victory, which was marked by the disqualification of thousands of reformist or moderate candidates.

Also on Sunday, ultraconservative MP and 2021 presidential candidate Alireza Zakani was elected as mayor of Tehran, state news agency IRNA reported.

He won the majority of conservative-dominated city council votes, but he cannot take over before resigning from the parliament, it said.

He succeeds Pirouz Hanachi, a veteran public servant with a background in urban development seen as close to the reformist camp.

Zakani has served in parliament between 2004 and 2016, and won a seat again last year.

A doctor in nuclear medicine, aged 55, he dropped out of the June presidential race in favour of Raisi.

 

Libya’s wildlife treasure island at risk of ruin

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

Farwa faces a long list of threats, environmental activists say, including illegal fishing and pollution (AFP photo)

FARWA, Libya — Once famed for its exceptional wildlife, Libya’s Farwa Island risks becoming just another victim of lawlessness in the war-ravaged North African nation, activists struggling to save it warn.

An uninhabited 13 kilometre-long sandbar cut off at high tide in far western Libya, Farwa appears picture-postcard idyllic, with scattered date palms on white sandy beaches and ringed by the sparkling Mediterranean Sea.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has said Farwa is potentially the “most important coastal and marine site in western Libya, in terms of its high marine and coastal biodiversity”.

But it faces a long list of threats, said Fawzi Dhane from local environmental group Bado, identifying illegal fishing and pollution as key worries.

Climate change is also exacerbating the situation, making Farwa more vulnerable to the pressures already heaped on its fragile environment.

For decades there were few visitors, apart from occasional school trips to the island.

Libya’s former dictator Muammar  Qadhafi dreamt of building a luxury seaside resort there, complete with “floating” villas and a golf course.

But Qadhafi was ousted and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, and Libya has struggled to contain violence and political turmoil ever since.

 

Explosive fishing 

 

In a country awash with weapons, some find lobbing grenades into the water an easy way to fish — a destructive method killing everything in the blast zone.

“The fishermen do not respect anything,” Dhane said, blaming boats from the port of Zuwara, some 40 kilometres to the east.

“They fish at all times, in an unregulated way — and they practise fishing with explosives.”

Endangered loggerhead turtles are also being harmed, according to the activist.

“The turtles are sometimes caught in fishing nets, when they are not killed by fishermen who fear their bites,” said Dhane.

The Bado association works to protect turtle clutches laid on the beach from predators and from people who come to dig up the eggs.

The island, which lies close to the border with Tunisia, is made up of sand dunes stretching over 4.7 square kilometres. Its lagoon and salt marshes are also home to flamingos.

One of the only buildings is a crumbling lighthouse built in the 1920s under Italian colonial rule.

Farwa is among the most important areas in Libya for many migratory birds, according to Tarek Jdeidi from the University of Tripoli. It is a key staging post for those travelling over Africa to rest before flying across the Mediterranean to Europe.

Today, Farwa has become a popular spot for Libyan holidaymakers, with dozens visiting every weekend.

“They leave their rubbish behind,” sighed Dhane.

 

Chemical pollution 

 

Another threat comes from the nearby Abu Kammash petrochemical factory, which has for years “leaked heavy metals” into the soil and sea, according to Dhane.

While the complex has been abandoned, the impact of the dangerous pollution “is still felt”, he added.

Shawky Muammar, an archaeologist who has conducted digs on the island, discovering Roman-era tools and tombs, calls the pollution from the dilapidated plant an “environmental disaster”.

He also expressed worry that rising sea levels due to climate change could swamp the low-lying island.

“It risks being swallowed up if measures are not taken to try to contain the sea,” he said.

In recent years, oil-rich Libya was split between two rival administrations backed by foreign powers and myriad militias.

After a peace deal last year, an interim unity government was agreed in March ahead of elections set for December.

But it has not changed anything for the island.

In the meantime, environmental groups have taken on the task of protecting Farwa, while hoping for a return to stability and the rule of law.

Dhane said he has “organised conferences and awareness campaigns in schools” to try and explain the threats the island faces.

And in partnership with international organisations like the World Wildlife Fund, “we are trying to educate fishermen”, he added.

 

Ancient pharaonic boat taken to Egypt’s grand new museum

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

Khufu’s solar boat on its journey to the new Grand Egyptian Museum (AFP photo)

CAIRO — Egypt has transported the Pharaoh Khufu’s intact solar boat dating back some 4,600 years to the country’s soon to be unveiled grand museum, the antiquities ministry said on Saturday.

Solar boats were buried in pits next to royal burial chambers in the belief that they would transport the departed into the afterlife.

Cairo’s Great Pyramid — also known as the Pyramid of Cheops — is the largest of the three Giza pyramids and houses Khufu’s tomb.

“After... crossing the streets of Giza on a smart vehicle, the first boat of King Khufu discovered in 1954 at the southern corner of the Great Pyramid has terminated its long journey to the Grand Egyptian Museum [GEM],” a ministry statement said.

The boat was commissioned by Khufu, a Fourth Dynasty monarch who ruled during the Old Kingdom.

The ministry boasted that the 42 metre long and 20 tonne solar boat is “the biggest and oldest organic artifact made of wood, in the history of humanity”.

Its journey on a special remote-controlled vehicle imported from Belgium began late on Friday and took 10 hours, the official MENA news agency reported.

Egypt has touted the anticipated opening of the GEM at the Giza plateau, home to the famed pyramids, as an important archaeological landmark housing its most precious antiquities.

The vessel was transported intact on its 7.5 kilometre journey, and is set to be one of the star exhibits when the new museum opens.

It had been on display near the Great Pyramid.

Egypt has pinned its hopes on a series of recent archaeological discoveries to revive its vital but ailing tourism sector which has suffered multiple shocks, from the 2011 uprising to today’s coronavirus pandemic.

In April, authorities moved the mummified remains of 22 pharaohs from Cairo’s iconic Egyptian Museum in a grandiose ceremony to the National Museum of Egyptian Civilisation in the city.

In a carefully choreographed televised event, President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi greeted the coffins that included the mummies of Ramses II and Queen Hatshepsut.

 

Sudan recalls ambassador from Ethiopia as tensions rise

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

KHARTOUM — Sudan has recalled its ambassador to neighbouring Ethiopia, the foreign ministry said on Sunday, reporting Addis Ababa had spurned its efforts at trying to broker a ceasefire in war-torn Tigray.

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, chair of the regional body IGAD, wanted “to encourage all Ethiopian sides to reach a ceasefire agreement, and engage in comprehensive political talks”, the ministry said in a statement.

But last week Ethiopia said their trust in some of Sudan’s leaders had been “eroded”, and accused the Sudanese army of launching an “incursion” into their territory.

Northern Ethiopia has been wracked by fighting since last November, when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops to topple the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, the region’s then ruling party.

Tens of thousands of Ethiopians have fled to refugee camps in Sudan, to escape a conflict that the UN says has pushed 400,000 people into famine-like conditions.

Relations between Khartoum and Addis Ababa have also soured over the contested border region of Fashaga, a fertile strip long cultivated by Ethiopian farmers, but claimed by Sudan.

Billene Seyoum, spokeswoman for Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, said the issue “needs to be thoroughly addressed, before Sudan could be entertained as a credible party in terms of facilitating such kind of negotiations”.

Sudan’s foreign ministry on Sunday said it had “followed statements made by senior Ethiopian officials refusing Sudan’s help to end the bloody conflict in Tigray, citing a lack of neutrality and [Sudan’s] occupation of Ethiopian territories”, the ministry statement read.

It dismissed the statements as “allegations with no basis”, adding that “Sudan has recalled its ambassador to Ethiopia for consultations”.

The two countries are also at odds over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, the centre of a regional dispute ever since Addis Ababa broke ground on the project in 2011.

Downstream nations Egypt and Sudan both fear the Blue Nile mega-dam threatens the waters they depend on.

 

Iran rejects G-7 and US allegations over drone attack on ship

By - Aug 08,2021 - Last updated at Aug 08,2021

TEHRAN — Iran on Saturday rejected Western allegations its drones were used in a deadly tanker attack, while accusing Israel of concocting the "scenario" in a bid to undermine the Islamic republic.

The MT Mercer Street, an oil products tanker operated by Israeli-controlled Zodiac maritime, was struck last week off Oman's coast, killing two crew members — a Briton and a Romanian.

The incident on July 29 upped the stakes in what analysts have called a "shadow war" that has seen a spate of attacks on vessels linked to Iran and Israel.

G-7 foreign ministers on Friday pointed the finger of blame for the latest attack at Iran, as the US military released the findings of an investigation alleging the drones were made in the Islamic republic.

Iran dismissed the allegations.

"We strongly condemn the baseless statement by the foreign ministers of the G-7 and the European Union's high representative for foreign affairs in which they have directed baseless accusations at the Islamic Republic of Iran," Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said.

The tanker attack and the accusations against Iran were a “scenario” concocted with “notable” timing, he said, as they came days before Iran’s new ultraconservative President Ebrahim Raisi took the oath of office.

Raisi was inaugurated on August 3 by Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and sworn in by parliament two days later, taking over from moderate president Hassan Rouhani.

“For experts and those who know the history of this region, it is not a new thing that the Zionist regime [Israel] would design such conspiracies,” Khatibzadeh said.

Citing the results of a probe, the US Central Command said on Friday that remnants from one of three explosives-laden drones that targeted the Mercer Street indicated it was produced in Iran.

“This was a deliberate and targeted attack, and a clear violation of international law... There is no justification for this attack,” the foreign ministers of the world’s seven most developed nations (G7) said in a statement.

‘Fake evidence’ 

Iran’s military spokesman denied the US allegations.

“The Americans say they have found parts of Iran’s drones in the water, and this is their evidence. But what laboratory has determined [the drones] belong to Iran?,” Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi was quoted by IRNA news agency as saying.

“This is the Americans’ method, to weave stories and use it to accuse Iran... this is the method they have chosen to pressure Iran,” he added.

Shekarchi also said the accusations were a “psychological operation” launched against Iran by its enemies.

“If we are supposed to confront our enemies, like what we did at Ain Al Assad, we would clearly announce it,” he noted, referring to an Iraqi military base housing American troops.

The base was hit by a barrage of Iranian missiles in January 2020 to avenge the assassination of the Revolutionary Guards’ top commander Qasem Soleimani, killed in an American air strike days before in Baghdad.

“Creating fake evidence is not very difficult [and] since the Zionists have a record of creating fake evidence, causing an explosion on a ship is not very difficult,” Shekarchi added.

On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said his government was “working on enlisting the world” in response to the attack but warned “we also know how to act alone”.

Iran on Thursday warned its arch-foe not to take military action against it.

“We state this clearly: ANY foolish act against Iran will be met with a DECISIVE response,” Khatibzadeh said.

“Don’t test us,” added the foreign ministry spokesman.

There have been several reported attacks on Israeli and Iranian ships in recent months that the two have blamed each for.

Iran has also accused Israel of sabotaging its nuclear sites and killing a number of its scientists.

What now for Ennahdha after Tunisia political ‘earthquake?’

By - Aug 07,2021 - Last updated at Aug 07,2021

A handout photo provided by the Tunisian Presidency’s official Facebook Page on August 1 shows President Kais Saied (centre) gesturing as he walks protected by security while touring through Habib Bourguiba avenue in the centre of the capital Tunis (AFP photo)

TUNIS — Tunisian President Kais Saied’s move to sack the government and dissolve parliament two weeks ago has triggered what experts say is an existential crisis for his nemesis, the Islamist-inspired party Ennahdha.

Despite remaining the most influential party in the decade since the North African country’s revolution, Ennahdha was already wracked by internal divisions before last month’s “earthquake”.

 

So can it survive, and how?

How did July 25 affect Ennahdha? 

 

Ennahdha was founded four decades ago by Rached Ghannouchi, who has remained at the helm ever since despite years of exile under the dictatorship of Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali.

After Ben Ali fell in Tunisia’s 2011 revolution, Ennahdha made a return to politics and has since been part of every parliamentary coalition backing the country’s string of short-lived governments.

Ennahdha is the most organised party in the country and the biggest bloc in the deeply fragmented 217-seat legislature, which is also headed by Ghannouchi.

But since 2014, the party’s share of the vote has plummeted.

In elections two years ago it lost 36 of its 89 seats.

In total, since Tunisia’s first democratic elections in 2011, it has lost more than a million votes nationwide.

The party has also seen internal fractures in recent years as younger members have demanded changes at the top, including replacing 80-year-old Ghannouchi himself.

Those divisions burst into the spotlight when Saied, a bitter critic of the party system, on July 25 sacked the Ennahdha-supported government and suspended parliament.

Coming after months of public outrage at the government’s mishandling of Tunisia’s grinding economic and health crises, Saied’s move was a crushing blow for Ennahdha.

Some party members have since accused its leadership of putting its existence in danger through their lack of political vision.

Ennahdha had been weakened by an “earthquake” which deepened “internal divisions between those who support Ghannouchi and those calling for him to leave”, said analyst and history professor Abdellatif Hannachi.

Some Tunisians opposed to Ennahdha have voiced optimism that Saied’s moves will mark the end of the party, a rare example of a Muslim Brotherhood-inspired political movement that has reached — and remained — in power in a democracy.

Many within the party, which experienced decades of repression under Ben Ali, fear a campaign of mass arrests or a complete ban.

But analyst Mohamed Sahbi Khalfaoui said Ennahdha’s “popular base” could help prevent its demise.

“Completely excluding it from the political scene would be difficult,” he told AFP.

 

Can the party come back? 

But Ennahdha does have certain strengths that mean it is too early to write it off just yet, said Hannachi.

It has the experience and “the capacity to adapt and absorb crises, because it’s organised and structured”, he said.

The party has repeatedly proven its ability to manoeuvre out of tight spots.

In 2013, facing accusations it was linked to the assassinations of two prominent left-wing activists, Ennahdha quit the government and joined a landmark national dialogue.

The following year, it guaranteed its political survival by forming a coalition with ostensibly secular party Nidaa Tounes.

In 2019, it pulled off a similar move, allying with the Qalb Tounes Party of businessman Nabil Karoui.

Since Saied’s bombshell announcement on July 25, which Ennahdha initially condemned as “a coup against the revolution and the constitution”, the party’s rhetoric has dramatically shifted.

On Thursday, its governing council admitted the need for “a profound internal self-critique of its policies” and said it understood “growing popular anger, particularly among youth, as a result of economic and social failings” a decade after the revolution.

Hannachi said Ennahdha was “bending in order to survive the storm”.

Saied has ruled out any reversal of his moves.

“What happened with the president showed Ennahdha in a state of huge weakness,” said Khalfaoui.

“Unlike in the past, it no longer holds the reins of [Tunisia’s] politics.”

 

What about Ghannouchi? 

 

Ennahdha’s chief, who wanted to create a “Muslim democratic” party, remains a key figure of political Islam in the only country whose democracy has survived a decade since the Arab Spring uprisings.

Some Ennahdha members credit him with the party’s reemergence on the political scene since 2011 and a major role in the country’s negotiated democratic transition.

For others, the ageing leader exerts an authoritarian grip on the party, saying it has become his personal fiefdom.

Ennahdha’s 11th congress, which had been planned for 2020 in order to elect a new leader, has been pushed back to later this year amid sharp differences over Ghannouchi’s fate.

The leader, who has already outlasted his maximum permitted term, was now “seen as a burden by part of Ennahdha and its leadership”, Hannachi said.

Some want to topple him in order to save the party.

“His future as a political actor... is over,” Khalfaoui said.

Whether the party he founded can revive itself without him remains to be seen.

 

Areas of Iraqi province lose power after attack on pylons

By - Aug 05,2021 - Last updated at Aug 05,2021



SAMARRA, Iraq — Iraq's northern Salaheddin province was left partially without power after "terrorists" blew several pylons, the government said on Thursday, as increasing attacks add to the strain on Iraq's electricity network.

"Terrorist elements" using "explosive devices" carried out attacks on 13 pylons over the past 48 hours, the electricity ministry said in a statement.

Provincial authorities distributed photos showing the damaged pylons.

Several districts in Salaheddin have since been without power, including some neighbourhoods in Samarra, one of the province's largest cities, an AFP correspondent said.

Unclaimed attacks on Iraq's electricity network have been increasing since the start of summer.

Authorities normally accuse "terrorists" of being behind the attacks, without identifying a particular group.

Oil-rich Iraq produces just 16,000 megawatts of power -- far below the 24,000 megawatts needed, and even further from the expected future needs of a country whose population is set to double by 2050, according to the UN.

The country buys gas and electricity from neighbouring Iran to supply about a third of its power sector, which has been worn down by years of conflict and poor maintenance, and is unable to meet the needs of the country's 40 million population.

Last month, areas in the country's south were plunged into darkness for several days after a series of similar attacks.

Around the same time, Iran briefly suspended its gas and electricity exports because of Iraq's failure to pay a $6 billion energy debt.

The US blacklisted Iran's energy industry in late 2018 as it ramped up sanctions, but has granted Baghdad a series of temporary waivers, hoping that Iraq would wean itself off Iranian energy.

The failure of Iraq's power system is particularly acute in the baking hot summer months, often a time of social protest exacerbated by electricity shortages, when temperatures shoot past 45 degrees Celsius.

Energy consultant Harry Istepanian said factors contributing to Iraq's energy crisis included not only the Iranian export suspension but also a "lack of enough generation capacity and fuel supply, lack of maintenance of the existing generation units, high demand... high technical and commercial losses, vandalism and sabotage".

Israel conducts first Lebanon air strikes in seven years-- military

By - Aug 05,2021 - Last updated at Aug 05,2021

A United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) convoy drives past one of their outposts manned by Italian peacekeepers, during a patrol on Thursday on the road between the southern Lebanese towns of Naqura and Shamaa near the border with Israel (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The Israeli air force said it carried out air strikes on neighbouring Lebanon for the first time in seven years on Thursday, following a second day of rocket fire across the border.

Lebanon condemned the strikes as an "escalation" that could mark a change of tactics by Israel, while UN peacekeepers urged restraint.

"Earlier today [Thursday], rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israeli territory," the Israeli air force tweeted.

"In response... fighter jets struck the launch sites and infrastructure used for terror in Lebanon from which the rockets were launched."

The air force said "an additional target in the area from which rockets have been launched in the past was struck as well".

Israeli jets routinely strike Palestinian militant targets in Gaza, and suspected Hizbollah or Iranian targets in Syria.

But it was the first time since 2014 that they had hit targets in Lebanon,

Lebanon's Al Manar television, run by the powerful Shiite militant group Hizbollah, said Israeli forces carried out two strikes at around 12:40 am (2140 GMT) outside the town of Mahmudiya, some 11 kilometres  from the border.

Lebanon's official National News Agency also reported the strikes, but provided few details.

Lebanese President Michel Aoun said "Israel's use of its air force to target Lebanese villages is the first of its kind since 2006, and suggests an intention to escalate attacks" against Lebanon.

The UN peacekeeping force UNIFIL, which has been deployed in Lebanon since 1978 and has patrolled the border since the 2006 conflict, said on Thursday that Israel and Lebanon should "act with urgency" to deescalate tensions.

Meeting with Israeli and Lebanese military officers at a UN position in southern Lebanon, UNIFIL's head of mission Stefano Del Col called on the sides "to explore ways to reinforce security and stability along the Blue Line," referring to the UN-demarcated border.

"In the most imperfect times, this mechanism has served you well, and now is the time to recommit to it, not allow the spoilers to have the better of us," Del Col said, in remarks relayed by UNIFIL.

Lebanese army investigating 

Israeli warplanes last struck Lebanese territory near the border with Syria in 2014, but they have not targeted Hizbollah's south Lebanon strongholds since the militants fought a devastating conflict with Israel in 2006.

Thursday was the second straight day that Israel had reported rocket fire from Lebanon.

Three rockets were fired on Wednesday, two of which reached Israel, striking near the northern town of Kiryat Shmona, where four people were treated for "stress symptoms".

In response to that attack, the Israeli force said it had carried out three rounds of retaliatory shelling of south Lebanon.

It triggered multiple brush fires in the tinder-dry conditions, but there were no reports of casualties.

The Lebanese army said 92 artillery shells fired by Israel landed in southern Lebanon following the Wednesday rocket fire.

It said it was investigating who fired the rockets.

The exchange came as thousands of grief-stricken Lebanese marked the first anniversary of a devastating explosion in Beirut Port that killed at least 214 people and irreparably scarred the nation's psyche.

The then government resigned in the face of a wave of popular anger but a year later, despite a worsening economic meltdown, no new Cabinet has been formed.

Israel has warned repeatedly that it will not allow a power vacuum in Beirut to undermine security on its northern border.

The military said it "views the state of Lebanon as responsible for all actions originating in its territory, and warns against further attempts to harm Israeli civilians and Israel's sovereignty".

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