Hamas and another terrorist group that calls itself the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) said on Sept. 30 that their respective leaders in Lebanon were targeted and killed in separate Israeli air strikes.
Lebanon’s Health Ministry has said more than 1,000 Lebanese have been killed and 6,000 wounded in the past two weeks, without saying how many were civilians. The government said a million people—a fifth of the population—have fled their homes. Israel has said it gives civilians advanced warnings, asking for their cooperation to evacuate areas ahead of their strikes.
Syrian residents in the area said they had been sleeping under a bridge in the neighborhood for days after fleeing Israel’s bombardments.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) also said in a statement at about 1 a.m. that it was “currently striking terror targets belonging to the Hezbollah terrorist organization in the area of Beqaa in Lebanon.”
The sites were the Hezbollah locations for rocket launchers and weapons storage, the army said.
On Sept. 29, the IDF announced it had taken out another senior Hezbollah member, Nabil Qaouk, who commanded Hezbollah’s Preventative Security Unit and was a member of its executive council, in charge of the organization’s economic and social operations.
A suspicious aerial object was intercepted over the Upper Galilee early on Sept. 30, and a UAV in Israel’s economic waters in the north was intercepted by the IDF at about 9 a.m.
Iran-backed Hezbollah has most of its operations in southern Lebanon or Beirut’s southern suburbs.
The IDF also said that it had hit a Hamas target in northern Gaza at the Abu Ja'far Al Mansour school that was turned into a Hamas command center to be used by terrorists against IDF troops.
“This is a further example of the Hamas terrorist organization’s systematic abuse of civilian infrastructure in violation of international law,” the IDF stated.