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Middle East crisis: Iran confirms resumption of air traffic – as it happened | Israel

Middle East crisis: Iran confirms resumption of air traffic – as it happened | Israel

Rockets hit Israeli port city of Haifa

Hezbollah said it targeted an Israeli military base near the northern city of Haifa, the third attack on a military position in the area in one day.

Hezbollah fighters launched “a salvo of Fadi 1 rockets at the Carmel base south of Haifa,” the group said in a statement, AFP reported.

Five people were wounded in the rocket attack, the Times of Israel reported, citing Ramban hospital.

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Key events

This blog has now closed. You can see all our coverage of the Israel-Gaza war: one year on here and all our coverage of the Israel-Lebanon conflict here.

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Iranian authorities have confirmed the resumption of air traffic after flight cancellations at some airports over “operational restrictions”, state media is reporting according to AFP.

Flights have been operational again since 11pm (1930 GMT) on Sunday and were being “carried out in accordance with the flight schedule”, said Jafar Yazarloo, spokesman for Iran’s Civil Aviation Organisation, quoted by the Irna state news agency.

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The Israeli military’s blanket call for civilians to evacuate from northern Gaza may be part of a plan published by retired military commanders last month to put Hamas militants who remain in the area under siege in order to force the release of hostages.

The Likud MP Avichai Boaron told the Guardian’s Lorenzo Tondo last month that the plan was being evaluated by the government. He said:

According to the plan, the IDF will evacuate all the civilians who are in the north of Gaza, from the border to the Gaza River … And after they will evacuate, the IDF will assume that only the terrorists will remain. When the civilians population has left, you can find and kill all the terrorists without harming the civilians.

The plan does not tackle the question of what would happen to Palestinian civilians who are unable or unwilling to leave, or how it will help with releasing the hostages.

Between 300,000 and 500,000 Palestinians are though to remain in northern Gaza under increasingly ire humanitarian conditions, though exact circumstances are difficult to verify as Israel does not allow in foreign journalists.

You can read Lorenzo’s full report here:

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And some pictures from Haifa, where at least five people were injured in a rocket attack launched from Lebanon:

Israeli rescue force members inspect the site where a projectile fell in Haifa. Photograph: Shir Torem/Reuters
People look on at the scene where a rocket fell in Haifa. Photograph: Shir Torem/Reuters
Israeli rescue force members inspect the site where a projectile fell in Haifa. Photograph: Shir Torem/Reuters
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Some more footage from the scene of one of the rocket explosions in Haifa:

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One person is in a “moderate to serious” condition following a rocket attack launched from Lebanon on the northern Israeli city of Tiberias, the Times of Israel is reporting, citing a local ambulance service.

Israeli media reported that several explosions had taken place in the city, citing police.

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The Israeli military has claimed in a statement that its latest attacks on Beirut targeted Hezbollah’s headquarters as well as the militant organisation’s “munitions warehouses in the Beirut area”.

It claimed that secondary explosions in the areas targeted indicated the presence of weapons.

It also said its warplanes were continuing to attack targets in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa valley region, about 30km east of Beirut, “ including munitions warehouses, military buildings, a headquarters and a launcher”.

“Fighter planes continue to attack Lebanon even at this time,” it said in a post on X.

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Summary of the day so far

It’s 1.30am in Tel Aviv, Beirut and Gaza. Here’s a recap of the latest developments:

  • Israel launched fresh strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs late on Sunday, a day after heavy consecutive strikes on the Lebanese capital. Israeli jets launched a strike targeting the Saint Therese area, and a second targeting the Burj al-Barajneh area, Lebanese state media reported, as well as two additional strikes, including one it described as “violent”. Lebanese security sources said Israeli strikes since Friday on Dahiyeh were keeping rescue workers from scouring the site of Thursday night’s attack.

  • Hezbollah said it targeted an Israeli military base near the northern city of Haifa late on Sunday, the third attack on a military position in the area in one day. Five people were wounded in the rocket attack, the Times of Israel reported. Police said that some buildings and properties were damaged.

  • The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) ordered a “closed military zone” around three towns on the border with Lebanon and issued new evacuation orders for areas in southern Lebanon on Sunday. In a statement, the IDF said it is “strictly prohibited” to enter the communities of Manara, Yiftach, and Malkia. The Israeli military’s Arabic-language spokesperson ordered residents of about 25 areas in southern Lebanon to head immediately to the north of the Awali river.

  • Israel expanded its actions in Lebanon, making its first strike in the northern city of Tripoli on Saturday, and Israeli troops launched raids in the south. A Lebanese security official told Reuters that Saturday’s strike on a Palestinian refugee camp in Tripoli killed a member of Hamas, his wife and two children. Media affiliated with the Palestinian group said the strike killed a leader of its armed wing, naming him as Saeed Atallah.

  • The UN’s peacekeeping force in Lebanon (Unifil) has said it is deeply concerned by what it called Israel’s “recent activities” adjacent to the mission’s position inside Lebanon. Unifil said on Sunday that the activities by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) are an “extremely dangerous development” as it “urgently” reminded all actors of “their obligations to protect UN personnel and property.” Ireland’s president, Michael D Higgins, said it is “outrageous” for the IDF to have “threatened” Unifil.

  • More than 2,000 people have been killed in Lebanon nearly a year of fighting, most of them in the past two weeks, according to the Lebanese health ministry. The ministry said on Sunday 23 people had been killed on Saturday.

  • The latest Israeli strikes on Beirut came after days of Israeli bombing that killed the Hezbollah leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, and possibly his potential successor, Hashem Safieddine. A Lebanese security source said on Saturday that Safieddine had been out of contact since Friday, after an Israeli airstrike near the city’s international airport that was reported to have targeted him. Israeli strikes across the region in the past year, sharply accelerated in the past few weeks, have shattered Hezbollah’s leadership. On Sunday, the Israeli foreign ministry said its air force killed Hezbollah commander, Hader Ali Taweel.

  • At least 41,870 Palestinians have been killed by Israel’s military offensive in Gaza since 7 October, according to latest figures released by Gaza’s health ministry on Sunday. The health ministry also reported at least 97,166 people have been injured. Thousands more are most likely lost in the rubble of the territory.

  • Israel issued a new blanket evacuation order for all of the northern Gaza Strip on Sunday, where hundreds of thousands of civilians remain. “We are in a new phase of the war,” the Israeli military said in leaflets dropped over the area. “These areas are considered dangerous combat zones.” Up to 300,000 people are estimated to have remained in the heavily destroyed north after earlier Israeli warnings that sent around a million people fleeing to the south, even though people say there is nowhere safe to go.

  • For the first time in months, Israel sent a column of tanks into northern Gaza and launched major operations there, surrounding Jabalia, the largest of strip’s eight historic refugee camps. Gaza’s civil defence agency said 24 people were killed and dozens wounded in an Israeli airstrike on a mosque in central Gaza early on Sunday. Witnesses said the number of casualties could rise as the mosque, near the Al-Aqsa hospital in Deir al-Balah, was being used to house displaced people. The Israeli military said it was being used as a Hamas command centre.

  • Palestinians across northern Gaza have been told to flee to al-Mawasi on the southern coast, a so-called “humanitarian area” where an estimated one million displaced people are sheltering. Mawasi, which has been the target of deadly Israeli airstrikes, is severely overcrowded and aid agencies struggle to provide even the most basic services. In May, an aid worker described to the Guardian the “horrific and dehumanising” conditions, with limited food, filthy and scarce water, overwhelmed healthcare facilities and almost no sanitation.

  • The UN high commissioner for refugees, Filippo Grandi, said that Lebanon is seeing a “major displacement crisis” as a result of Israel’s escalating airstrikes, some of which have violated international law. About 40% of Lebanon’s 1.25 million school pupils have become displaced by ongoing Israeli attacks, Lebanon’s director general of education, Imad Achkar, said. The Lebanese government has said schools will postpone the start of the academic year due to intensifying Israeli airstrikes. Israeli strikes have forced 1.2 million people – almost a quarter of Lebanon’s population – from their homes, officials say. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) said 20,000 Palestinian refugees have been forcibly displaced by Israeli airstrikes on camps in Lebanon.

  • Israeli authorities said they were on the lookout for attacks timed to coincide with the first anniversary of the 7 October attacks on Monday. One woman was killed and 10 people were wounded in the suspected terror attack on Sunday at the central bus station in Be’er Sheva, a city in the Negev desert in southern Israel, the second attack in the last week. Israel’s military reportedly said it anticipates possible long-range rocket fire from the Gaza Strip.

  • Syria’s defence ministry said Israel launched airstrikes on military positions in central Syria on Sunday, causing “material damage”. “Israeli strikes” targeted a “weapons depot south of Homs and a rockets depot in the eastern Hama countryside,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights War Monitor, told AFP.

  • Israel’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said his country is closely coordinating with the US as it prepares to strike back at Iran, but that Tel Aviv will make its own independent decisions about how to retaliate. Despite the US having made clear that it opposes a strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, Gallant told CNN on Sunday that “everything is on the table”. Gallant is expected to visit the US this coming week where he is scheduled to meet with the US defense secretary, Lloyd Austin. In a statement on Sunday, Gallant warned Iran that it may end up like Gaza or Beirut if it attempts to harm Israel.

  • The US vice-president, Kamala Harris, said Washington will not stop putting pressure on Israel and Arab leaders during ongoing diplomatic efforts. Harris was asked, in an interview with “60 Minutes” if the US has a “real close ally” in Netanyahu, to which she responded: “The better question is, do we have an important alliance between the American people and the Israeli people? The answer to that question is yes.”

  • The last currently scheduled plane for British nationals leaving Lebanon landed in Birmingham airport on Sunday night. The flight was the fourth charter flight to have left Beirut for the UK. There are no further flights scheduled, the UK Foreign Office said, citing a reduction in demand but it said the situation will be “closely” monitored. In addition, the UK has advised its citizens on Sunday against all travel to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

  • The UK government is advising Israel to show “restraint” as Keir Starmer warned that “sparks”’ from the Middle East conflict could “light touchpapers in our communities at home”. Peter Kyle, a UK cabinet minister, did not rule out the possibility of the UK military helping Israel attack Iran, but noted any “operational decision to be taken” would be based on “delicate negotiations”.

  • A call by France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, for a halt in arms supplies to Israel for use in Gaza has been met with an angry rebuttal from Benjamin Netanyahu. “As Israel fights the forces of barbarism led by Iran, all civilised countries should be standing firmly by Israel’s side,” Netanyahu said in a statement. The pair spoke on Sunday in a call that the Élysée Palace described as “frank”.

  • Thousands of protesters took to the streets in major cities around the world for a second day on Sunday to demand an end to bloodshed in Gaza and the wider Middle East as the start of Israel’s war in the Palestinian territory approaches its first anniversary. About 40,000 pro-Palestinian demonstrators marched through central London while thousands gathered in Paris, Rome, Manila, Cape Town, New York City, Sydney and Melbourne.

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Updated at 

Israel launched four strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs on Sunday, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA).

Israeli jets launched a strike targeting the Saint Therese area, and a second targeting the Burj al-Barajneh area, it reported.

It later reported two additional strikes, including one it described as “violent”.

The strikes came shortly after an Israeli military spokesperson issued immediate evacuation orders to residents of Beirut’s southern suburbs. The spokesperson, Avichay Adraee, added:

You are located near Hezbollah facilities and interests, and the IDF (Israeli military) will operate against them in the near future.

The latest strikes came after Israel launched airstrikes in the night from Saturday to Sunday in what NNA called the “most severe” bombing of the war.

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Last UK charter flight carrying Britons from Lebanon lands

The last currently scheduled plane for British nationals leaving Lebanon has landed in Birmingham airport.

The flight was the fourth charter flight to have left Beirut for the UK.

There are no further flights scheduled, the UK Foreign Office said, citing a reduction in demand but it said the situation will be “closely” monitored.

It said that the UK has “helped over 430 people to leave Lebanon” over the last week.

British nationals who remain in Lebanon are advised to register their presence to receive up-to-date information, and to take the “next available commercial flight”.

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Rockets hit Israeli port city of Haifa

Hezbollah said it targeted an Israeli military base near the northern city of Haifa, the third attack on a military position in the area in one day.

Hezbollah fighters launched “a salvo of Fadi 1 rockets at the Carmel base south of Haifa,” the group said in a statement, AFP reported.

Five people were wounded in the rocket attack, the Times of Israel reported, citing Ramban hospital.

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The UK has advised its citizens on Sunday against all travel to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories due to a heightened state of tension and violent clashes in the region.

A statement from the Foreign Office said it “advises against all travel to the area close to the border with Gaza and all but essential travel to the rest of Israel and the OPTs.”

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