Israel kills top Hezbollah commander in attack on Lebanon’s capital

Haytham Ali Tabatabai, the country’s top military commander, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on the capital of Lebanon, according to Hezbollah.

At least five people were killed in the attack on an apartment block in southern Beirut on Sunday, according to Tabatabai, the group’s chief of staff.

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Hezbollah released a statement claiming that “the great commander” Tabatabai was killed in an “a dangerous Israeli attack on the Haret Hreik area in the southern suburbs of Beirut” without stating what his organization’s position was.

Tabatabai is the most senior Hezbollah leader to have been killed by Israel since the start of a ceasefire in November 2024, which aims to put an end to the conflict’s more than a year.

Tabatabai was the target of the attack, according to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s earlier statement. According to Israeli media, this was the military’s third attempt to kill him since the end of the war last year.

Mahmoud Qmati, a senior Hezbollah official, previously claimed that the organization’s leadership was considering whether to take a countermeasure against Israel’s strike had crossed a “red line.”

He claimed that the assault on the southern suburbs today will lead to more assaults throughout Lebanon.

Tabatabai was the child of an Iranian father and a Lebanese mother in Beirut in 1968. He joined Hezbollah at the age of 12 after growing up in southern Lebanon.

28 people were also hurt, according to the Lebanoni government’s ministry of public health.

According to a report from Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA), two missiles were fired at the Haret Hreik apartment building and serious harm to nearby cars and structures.

In Beirut’s Haret Hreik neighborhood, rescuers search for survivors at a residential building.

Hezbollah is “in a difficult position,” he says.

According to Zeina Khodr, a reporter for Al Jazeera in Beirut, there is growing concern that Israel, “which has been acting with impunity,” will increase its strikes in Lebanon.

She said, “Hezbollah is in a difficult position.” Without a response, it might have increased the threat of Israeli attacks because it has lost its deterrence capabilities. However, if Israel does respond, it could start a bigger Israeli bombardment that might harm its base.

A major question now is how Hezbollah will respond, according to security affairs analyst Ali Rizk.

“In my humble opinion, I don’t believe Hezbollah is ready to give Netanyahu what he wants, giving him an excuse to start a full-fledged war with Lebanon once more,” Netanyahu said. That might improve Netanyahu’s chances in politics. He added that it might be very expensive.

Joseph Aoun, president of Lebanon, demanded a strong international response to put an end to Israeli attacks on the nation.

Aoun stated earlier on Sunday that Lebanon “reaffirms its call to the international community to assume its responsibility and take immediate and necessary action to put an end to the atrocities against Lebanon and its people.”

Hassan Nasrallah, a long-time Hezbollah leader, was killed by Israel in an airstrike in southern Beirut more than a year ago.

Given recent weeks of increased Israeli aggression, Pope Leo XIV is only a few days away from visiting the nation.

Israel has been attacking Lebanon throughout the region since the United States brokered the ceasefire agreement about a year ago, according to Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar.

According to him, “every attack on Lebanon crosses a red line, and this aggression is inherent in the person who violates Lebanon’s dignity, sovereignty, and the security of its citizens.”

Israeli attacks have been carried out repeatedly.

Beirut has not been hit in the past few months despite Israel’s nearly daily attacks on southern Lebanon and its frequent attacks on it.

The Lebanese Ministry of Public Health reports that at least 13 people have died as a result of an Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian refugee camp this week.

According to the state-run NNA, a drone struck a car in the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp’s car park on the outskirts of Sidon on Tuesday.

Lebanon has been subject to constant Israeli and US pressure to disarm Hezbollah.

By the end of the year, the Lebanese military had approved a plan that the government had approved in September. Israel continues to bomb the nation and occupy parts of the south while Hezbollah has refused to do so.

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Palestinian sculptors create art on Gaza beach sand to escape Israel’s war

The Israeli military has destroyed everything that is encircling Gaza’s shoreline, but the coast offers some fleeting solace from the besieged Palestinian enclave’s ongoing devastation.

Before the genocidal war, where the local artists had built sand sculptures on the beach to gather residents from the shoreline, which were once a magnet for large crowds.

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With utterly limited resources, they have transformed the beach into an open space for expression that also offers displaced Palestinian survivors a chance to unwind after more than two years of fighting.

Palestinian artist Yazid Abu Jarad [Screengrab/Al Jazeera] creates art on the sand of Gaza to escape Israel’s war.

Despite last month’s ceasefire with Hamas, Yazid Abu Jarad and his team used tape measures to carve letters in the sand and draw crowds, including children who have been left infected by the relentless Israeli attacks, which have continued despite the United States’ and mediators’ mediations.

“We see so many people gathered around us when we create art on the beach in Gaza. You can see it on the faces of young children and the elderly as well. He told Ibrahim al-Khalili on Al Jazeera that people “drift into a different world for a moment.”

They notice the bombings, destruction, and drone buzzing in the artwork, which is completely different from what they’ve been seeing since the war started. Even a small picture can influence how people feel in our drawings.

The artists use anything they can find as tools, including a broken tile, a stick pulled from the shore, and a small brush, which are all left over from the ongoing destruction of Gaza.

Their work is only temporary, just like the coastline itself.

Even though the tides cause the work to disappear by evening, another artist, Majd Ayada, told Al Jazeera, that he and others are daily drawing on the shore from morning until night.

“We return the following day and begin again.” We adore sculpting and drawing on the soil of Gaza, he said.

We never give up even after two years of fighting, they say.

After being repeatedly displaced by Israel, other Palestinian families are forced to use the little-used tents and flimsy plastic coverings as meager protection against the winter cold.

Palestinian sculptors create art on Gaza beach sand to escape Israel's war
Palestinian sculptors [Screengrab/Al Jazeera] create art on the sand of Gaza Beach.

The young people’s ability to create images and sculptures of Gaza, according to Fathi Abu Maoud, makes his family happy because it strengthens their bond to the place even more.

This is our home, according to the statement, “We were born here, our children were born here.” He claimed that Gaza is where we are rooted.

Palestinian sculptors create art on Gaza beach sand to escape Israel's war
In an effort to escape Israel’s war, children run near sculptors’ artwork [Screengrab/Al Jazeera] on Gaza beach sand.