Hamas Ammunition, Arms Explode In Southern Lebanon

Arms stored for the Palestinian Hamas group exploded in a refugee camp in southern Lebanon Friday night, killing and wounding several people, the state-run National News Agency reported.

Arms stored for the Palestinian Hamas group exploded in a refugee camp in southern Lebanon Friday night, killing and wounding several people, the state-run National News Agency reported.
A Lebanese security official said authorities have no exact numbers of the casualties yet but that there could be as many as 12 dead in the Burj Shamali camp in the port city of Tyre.
Camp residents had earlier said explosions shook the camp, adding that the nature of the blasts was not immediately clear.
Ambulances rushed to the scene, residents told The Associated Press by phone.
Several videos showing continuing explosions in the night sky were posted on social media.
Initial reports said a fire had started in a diesel tanker and spread to a nearby mosque controlled by the Palestinian militant group.
The fire triggered explosions of some weapons that appeared to have been stored inside the mosque, according to the residents.
NNA Said that the state prosecutor in southern Lebanon has asked security agencies and arms experts to inspect the arms storage site that belongs to Hamas.
Lebanon is home to tens of thousands of Palestinians refugees and their descendants.
Reporting by AP

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Tuesday vowed that Israel would continue to push back against what he called "destructive forces" in the region.
Bennett was speaking during a meeting with the leaders of Cyprus and Greece.
His comments came as Syrian state media reported that Israeli warplanes fired missiles at the port of Latakia earlier in the day.
Israel has attacked hundreds of Iran-related military bases and positions in Syria since 2017, but the port of Latakia is not a usual target.
Syria's state media quoted an unnamed military official as saying that several missiles struck the containers area in the port, setting some of them on fire.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitoring group, said the airstrike hit arms shipments for fighters loyal to Iran.
There was no comment from the Israeli military.
Israel has previously acknowledged, however, that it targets the bases of Iran-allied militias, such as Lebanon's militant Hezbollah group that has fighters deployed in Syria.
It says it attacks arms shipments believed to be bound for the militias.
Report by AP

AP - Syria's military said Israeli warplanes fired missiles on the port of the coastal city of Latakia early on Tuesday without inflicting any human losses.
Syria's state media quoted an unnamed military official as saying that several missiles struck the containers area in the port setting some of them on fire.
The official gave no further details.
It was a rare attack on the port of Latakia, a vital facility where much of Syria's imports are brought into the war-torn country.
Syrian state TV reported that five explosions were heard in the port and a huge fire erupted in the containers area and fire engines have rushed to the port.
There was no comment from the Israeli military.
Israel has staged hundreds of strikes on targets inside government-controlled Syria over the years but rarely acknowledges or discusses such operations.
Some of the strikes in the past had targeted the main airport in the capital Damascus.
Israel has acknowledged, however, that it targets the bases of Iran-allied militias, such as Lebanon's Hezbollah group that has fighters deployed in Syria.
Israel says Iranian presence on its northern frontier is a red line, justifying its strikes on facilities and weapons inside Syria.

Yemen's Iran-backed Houthis held military funerals on Monday for 25 fighters killed in battles with the Saudi-led coalition in the Marib region.
Fighting shows no sign of abating despite intense international diplomacy to end the seven-year-old conflict.
The funerals took place as fighting has raged in the gas-rich Marib region, while warplanes from the coalition have intensified their bombing of Sanaa, Marib and other areas.
The Houthis have also stepped up cross-border attacks on Saudi Arabia using armed drones and missiles.
An honor guard carried the coffins - draped with flags, flowers and photographs of the dead - with military music through the capital Sanaa. Relatives gathered to mourn their loved ones.
"We are in these days inspired by these martyrs' pride and dignity and say to them: 'congratulations! You have preceded us to a paradise as wide as the heavens and earth'," said Ali Muhyaddin, a relative of one of the dead.
The war in Yemen has killed tens of thousands and caused what the United Nations describes as the world's largest humanitarian crisis.
UN-led efforts to agree a ceasefire have stalled in the conflict, which is seen largely as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran.
Report by Reuters

UAE's top national security adviser Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan met in Tehran with President Ebrahim Raisi and national security chief Ali Shamkhani.
The Iranian government’s news website IRNA reported that Shamkhani told Tahnoon, “warm and friendly ties with neighbors as well as sharing economic, trade and investment potentials are the most important priority for the Islamic Republic in its foreign policy.”
Shamkhani in a veiled reference to the United States said that regional countries can cooperate to ward off “interventionist policies” by powers from outside the region.
Iran’s national security advisor called for mutual efforts with the United Arab Emirates to “end some military and security crises” that have caused hardship for the peoples of the region. He added, “Talks and mutual understanding should replace a military approach to solve differences.”
Later, President Ebrahim Raisi in his meeting with Sheikh Tahnoon reiterated the same positions, and also warning of Israel's influence in Arab countries, in a veiled reference to full relations between the UAE and Tehran's arch-enemy in the region.
"The Zionists in the region pursue their evil plans and wherever they can find a foothold, they try to use it as a tool for expansion and sedition, therefore, regional countries should be careful," Raisi said.
The United Arab Emirates and its ally Saudi Arabia have been fighting Iran-backed Houthi forces in Yemen since 2015. They also backed opposing sides in the Syrian civil war. The Sunni Gulf states see Iran’s aggressive regional policies, including arming and financing militant networks as a serious threat to their security.
IRNA says that Tahnoon in turn told Shamkhani Iran as a large and powerful country has a unique geopolitical position in the region and expanding “warm and brotherly ties” between Abu Dhabi and Tehran is a top priority for the UAE.
IRNA also quoted Tahnoon as saying that the two countries have significant potential for economic cooperation in transit, energy, health care and investments. He added, “It is necessary to form expert taskforces to pinpoint areas of cooperation in various economic fields.”
Iran has been using Dubai as a key outlet to international markets often referring to it as a one-stop-shop that could provide goods to Iran from a variety of Asian and other countries. Iranian trade and tourism has somewhat declined in recent years both because of cold relations between the two countries and also because of US sanctions reducing Iran’s economic interactions overall.
Many Iranian merchants maintain offices in Dubai where they have residence and business permits. Many Iranians also own real estate in Dubai and foreign-based satellite televisions constantly advertise properties in the UAE Iranians can buy with little or no legal restrictions.
Iran and Saudi Arabia also held talks earlier this year to reduce tensions, but Saudis have described the talks as exploratory, without any breakthroughs. No new meetings have been announced. Abu Dhabi has said that it will keep Riyadh and other allied abreast of it talks with Tehran.

Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman starts a tour of Gulf Arab states on Monday ahead of an annual Gulf summit, amid nuclear talks with Iran.
Prince Mohammed will visit Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait, Saudi-owned Al Arabiya television reported. Oman will be the first leg of the tour.
It would be the crown prince's first trip to neighboring Qatar since Riyadh and its Arab allies imposed an embargo on Doha in mid-2017.
Al Arabiya said the summit of Gulf Arab leaders would be held in the Saudi capital Riyadh in mid-December.
Saudi Arabia and the UAE have engaged with long-time foe Iran in a bid to contain regional tensions as indirect talks between Washington and Tehran to revive the 2015 nuclear pact drag.
The latest round of talks with Iran ended on December 3 without any results, leading to dismay among Western powers. Persian Gulf Arab states saw the 2015 nuclear deal as flawed for not addressing Tehran's missiles program and network of regional proxies.
Saudi Arabia's crown prince starts his regional tour on the same day that the UAE's top national security adviser is expected to Iran.
Saudi Arabia in April launched direct talks with Iran, to reduce tensions. Riyadh has described the discussions, held in Iraq, as largely exploratory.






