Mayor among 16 killed in Israeli strike on south Lebanon municipality building

Lebanese prime minister accuses Israel of intentionally targeting Nabatieh council meeting called to discuss war relief

Smoke billows during Israeli air strikes in the southern Lebanese city of Nabatiyeh on October 16th. Photograph: Abbas Fakih/AFP via Getty
Smoke billows during Israeli air strikes in the southern Lebanese city of Nabatiyeh on October 16th. Photograph: Abbas Fakih/AFP via Getty

An Israeli air strike destroyed the municipal headquarters in a major town in south Lebanon on Wednesday, killing 16 people including the mayor, in the biggest attack on an official Lebanese state building since the Israeli air campaign began.Lebanese officials denounced the attack, which also wounded more than 50 people in Nabatieh, a provincial capital, saying it was proof that Israel’s campaign against the Hizbullah armed group was now shifting to target the Lebanese state.

The Israelis “intentionally targeted a meeting of the municipal council to discuss the city’s service and relief situation” to aid people displaced by the Israeli campaign, caretaker prime minister Najib Mikati said.

Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant, on a visit to northern Israel near the border, said Israel would not halt its assault on Hizbullah to allow negotiations.

“Hizbullah is in great distress,” he said according to a statement from his office. “We will hold negotiations only under fire. I said this on day one, I said it in Gaza and I am saying it here.”

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Israel launched its ground and air campaign in Lebanon to dismantle Hizbullah after a year during which the Iran-backed militant group fired across the border in support of the Palestinian militants Hamas in Gaza.

Smoke billows after an Israeli air strike on Dahieh, a southern suburb of Beirut on Wednesday. Photograph: Str/EPA
Smoke billows after an Israeli air strike on Dahieh, a southern suburb of Beirut on Wednesday. Photograph: Str/EPA

In recent weeks Israel has assassinated Hizbullah’s senior leadership and pushed into southern border towns, saying its aim is to make it safe for tens of thousands of Israelis to return to homes in Israel’s north evacuated under Hizbullah fire.

Israel first issued an evacuation notice for Nabatieh, a city of tens of thousands of people, on Oct.ober 3rd. At the time, the city’s mayor, Ahmed Kahil, told Reuters he would not leave.

Israel’s military said on Wednesday it struck dozens of Hizbullah targets in the Nabatieh area and its navy also hit dozens of targets in southern Lebanon.

It said it had “dismantled” a tunnel network used by Hizbullah’s elite Radwan Forces in the heart of a town near the border with Israel, publishing a video showing multiple explosions rocking a cluster of buildings. Lebanese officials said it was the small town of Mhaibib.

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Earlier on Wednesday, Israeli warplanes hit Beirut’s southern suburbs for the first time in nearly a week. Two blasts were heard and plumes of smoke seen rising from two neighbourhoods. The blasts came after Israel issued an evacuation order that mentioned only one building.

The Israeli military said it had targeted an underground Hizbullah weapons stockpile.

“Prior to the strike, numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, including advancing warnings to the population in the area,” the Israeli military said. Hizbullah did not immediately comment.

It was the first attack on Beirut since October 10th, when two strikes near the city centre killed 22 people and brought down entire buildings in a densely populated neighbourhood.

A Palestinian boy looks at destroyed shelters at the site of an Israeli air strike which hit tents for displaced people two days earlier in the courtyard of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on October 16th. Photograph: Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty
A Palestinian boy looks at destroyed shelters at the site of an Israeli air strike which hit tents for displaced people two days earlier in the courtyard of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on October 16th. Photograph: Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty

Israel has called on the United Nations to move members of the Unifil peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon out of the combat zone for their safety. Unifilsays its troops have come under Israeli attack several times, though Israel has disputed accounts of those incidents.

The 10,000-strong peacekeeper force comprises contingents from 50 countries, including Italy, France, Spain and Ireland.

Having long accused Unifil of failing in its mission to keep armed fighters out of the border area, Israel adopted a more conciliatory tone on Wednesday.

“The state of Israel places great importance on the activities of Unifil and has no intention of harming the organisation or its personnel,” foreign minister Israel Katz said in a statement.

“Furthermore, Israel views Unifilas playing an important role in the ‘day after’ following the war against Hizbullah.”

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EU countries contributing to the peacekeeping mission held a conference call, and concluded that the mission is “essential and fundamental” and that only the UN can decide whether to end it, Spanish defence minister Margarita Robles said.

On Tuesday, US state department spokesman Matthew Miller said Washington had expressed its concerns to Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s administration over recent attacks on Beirut.

France has banned Israeli firms from participating in an upcoming military naval trade show, two sources aware of the matter said on Wednesday, the latest incident to highlight an increasingly tense relationship between the two allies.

Israeli operations in Lebanon have killed at least 2,350 people over the last year, according to the health ministry, and more than 1.2 million people have been displaced. The UN says a quarter of the country is under evacuation orders. The toll does not distinguish between civilians and combatants but includes hundreds of women and children.

About 50 Israelis, both soldiers and civilians, have been killed in the same period, according to Israel.

Mr Mikati, Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister, appeared to cast doubt on diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire.

“What can deter the enemy [Israel] from its crimes, which have reached the point of targeting peacekeeping forces in the south? And what solution is hoped for in light of this reality?” he said in a written statement. – Reuters