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Israeli Attack Kills 300 in Lebanon 04/10 06:15
BEIRUT (AP) -- Lebanon reeled Thursday after the deadliest day of the
renewed war between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group,
with the death toll exceeding 300 people as more remains were pulled from
rubble and bodies identified at hospitals. Meanwhile, Israel made the surprise
announcement of authorizing direct talks with Lebanon, despite their lack of
diplomatic ties. Israeli attacks continued.
The Health Ministry said that 1,150 people were also wounded in the
widespread strikes that rocked Lebanon on Wednesday, including in busy parts of
Beirut.
There was no immediate response to the Israeli announcement from Lebanon,
which had repeatedly proposed talks to end the war, or from Hezbollah. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that talks would focus on disarming
Hezbollah and "establishing peaceful relations" between the countries.
Negotiations are expected to begin next week at the State Department in
Washington, according to a person familiar with the plans. The talks are
expected to be handled on the American side by U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon
Michel Issa, and on the Israeli side by Israel's Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel
Leiter, according to the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the
delicacy of the situation.
A Lebanese diplomatic official familiar with the developments said that the
country has not yet appointed someone to lead talks from Beirut, but Lebanese
President Joseph Aoun is keen to have a temporary ceasefire when talks commence
in parallel with those taking place between the United States and Iran mediated
by Pakistan. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with
regulations.
Israel's announcement came hours after it had warned of escalation and said
that it had killed an aide and nephew of Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem, Ali
Yusuf Harshi.
Iran's parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, earlier said that
continued Israeli attacks on Lebanon would bring "explicit costs and STRONG
responses," while insisting that a two-week ceasefire in the Iran war extended
to Lebanon. Israel has disagreed.
Israeli strikes on Wednesday, without warning, killed at least 203 people
and wounded more than 1,000, Lebanon's Health Ministry said. Israel's military
said that it targeted Hezbollah sites, but several strikes hit densely packed
commercial and residential areas during rush hour, leading to widespread
civilian casualties. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called the attacks
"barbaric."
U.S. Vice President JD Vance on Wednesday said that Washington asked Israel
to scale back attacks on Lebanon to ensure negotiations with Iran are
successful.
'I thought I was dead'
In Beirut, people waited anxiously on the ragged edges of search and rescue
work, shielding their faces from the dust. Exhausted firefighters sat on a
charred car amid collapsed buildings.
Lebanese Civil Defense spokesperson Elie Khairallah told The Associated
Press that a wounded woman was found alive overnight in the seaside
neighborhood of Ain Mreisseh, and a man was found alive in his collapsed
apartment building in the southern suburbs.
Mohammad Chehab, a Syrian man from Deir el-Zour, said that six of his 10
family members had been found dead in a destroyed building.
"They've been searching all day" for the rest, he said.
At hospitals, survivors and doctors described the carnage, while relatives
gathered to identify bodies.
Abdul Rahman Mohammad, a Syrian who lost five relatives in the Hay al-Sellom
neighborhood, waited at Rafik Hariri Hospital to retrieve the bodies of his
mother, two sisters, brother and brother-in-law.
"They were struck without any warning. This is Israeli brutality," he said.
Dr. Mohamad El Zaatari, director of the public hospital, said that it had
treated 45 wounded people, including 10 cases in intensive care.
At the Makassed hospital, Rabee Koshok lay on his bed.
"I thought I was dead. What happened?" he recalled. "A big flash of light
struck my face and eyes, and I found someone flying over and landing next to
me. He was dead."
Koshok had been in the commercial district of Corniche al Mazraa when a
strike hit a nearby building.
Dr. Wael Jarrosh said that the hospital received around 70 wounded patients
within 10 minutes of the blasts. Two people died and five remained
hospitalized, including three in intensive care.
"This has destroyed us psychologically," the doctor said.
Lebanon alleges 'blatant violation' of international law
Netanyahu earlier had said that strikes would proceed "with force, precision
and determination." Israel's military has accused Hezbollah members of moving
out of the group's main areas of influence in southern Lebanon and Beirut's
southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, and blending into civilian areas.
Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said that his country would file an
urgent complaint with the U.N. Security Council, calling the attacks a "blatant
violation" of international and humanitarian law.
In a Cabinet session earlier Thursday, the Lebanese government announced a
plan to demilitarize Beirut and deploy larger numbers of security patrols.
Even before the renewed war, Lebanon's government had sought Hezbollah's
disarmament. The issue has inflamed tensions among Lebanese who are deeply
divided over Hezbollah and its arsenal.
Melhem Khalaf, a reformist legislator representing Beirut, was critical of
Israel's strikes, but also of Hezbollah for dragging Lebanon back into war.
"All the targeted areas are safe residential Lebanese areas," Khalaf said,
while watching a bulldozer clear rubble. "What we are witnessing is a massacre
against civilians."
More than a million people have been displaced by the war, many from the
south and Dahiyeh. Israel's military has issued warnings for the population to
leave those areas, followed by heavy bombardment.
Israel has also launched a ground invasion in the border region. The death
toll in Lebanon has reached 1,739, the health ministry said, with 5,873 wounded.
Meanwhile, the main border crossing between Lebanon and Syria returned to
service Thursday, five days after the Israeli military warned of plans to
strike it, alleging that Hezbollah was using it to smuggle military equipment.
Lebanese and Syrian authorities denied the claim.
More than 200,000 people have fled Lebanon into Syria since the war resumed.
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