Arab Times

Powerful blast rocks Hezb ‘stronghold’ in S. Lebanon

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AIN QANA, Lebanon, Sept 23, (AP): A powerful explosion shook a Hezbollah stronghold in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, sending thick grey smoke billowing over the village, but the cause was not clear.

The Lebanese army said the blast occurred in a building in the southern village of Ain Qana, above the port city of Sidon, and that it was investigat­ing. Lebanon’s official news agency, NNA, said the explosion coincided with intense Israeli overflight­s “that did not leave the skies” over the area since Tuesday morning.

It said the cause of the explosion, which damaged buildings, shattered windows and caused panic among residents, was not known.

The mysterious blast added to collective anxiety in a country still reeling from last month’s massive explosion in Beirut and struggling with an unpreceden­ted economic crisis.

“Thank God that there were no human losses, but there was a lot of panic, everyone was frightened,” said a villager who identified himself by his last name, Honeina.

The Israeli military declined to comment. Hezbollah and Israel fought a month-long war in 2006. Since then, the Iran-backed militant group is believed to have expanded its arsenal, amassing tens of thousands of rockets and missiles that can hit virtually anywhere in Israel.

Hezbollah members imposed a security cordon around the blast area Tuesday, barring journalist­s from reaching it. Footage broadcast by the local Al Jadeed station showed damage to buildings and debris scattered across a large area. The shaky footage also showed what appeared to be a minibus on fire. Other footage showed a wrecked SUV parked outside a damaged house.

The mysterious blast comes seven weeks after the giant explosion at Beirut’s port, caused by the detonation of nearly 3,000 tons of improperly stored ammonium nitrate. That explosion killed nearly 200 people, injured 6,500 and damaged tens of thousands of buildings in the capital.

It is still not clear what caused the initial fire that ignited the chemicals, and so far no one has been held accountabl­e.

A Hezbollah official said there were no casualties from Tuesday’s explosion and that no Hezbollah members were targeted. Another local Hezbollah official in Ain Qana, Ali Nazar, said the explosion destroyed a house where old mines and shells leftover from “past Israeli aggression” were being collected by a de-mining agency for disposal.

A Lebanese security official in southern Lebanon said the explosion occurred in a Hezbollah arms depot in the village, but did not elaborate on the cause. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

Israel violates Lebanese air space on an almost daily basis, and its aircraft have flown particular­ly low over many areas in the past few days. The commander of the UN peacekeepi­ng force in southern Lebanon, Maj Gen Stefano Del Col, told NNA Monday that the force has in recent days recorded a large number of air violations by the Israeli military.

He said the continuous overflight­s constitute a violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701 and Lebanese sovereignt­y.

“Such continued violations lead to an escalation of tension and can lead to incidents that threaten the cessation of hostilitie­s between Lebanon and Israel,” he was quoted as saying.

Israel accuses Hezbollah of violating the same UN resolution by operating close to the border, where it says the militants maintain forward operating posts and dig tunnels intended for future attacks.

Neither side is believed to be seeking war, but both have warned that the next round of hostilitie­s will be far more devastatin­g to the other side than the 2006 conflict.

“I would like to take this opportunit­y to present some pragmatic measures to achieve our common goals in the three pillars of the United Nations,” El-Sisi said.

“With regard to maintainin­g internatio­nal peace and security, it has become necessary for all of us to adopt an approach that guarantees the implementa­tion of resolution­s issued within multilater­al frameworks,” he added.

“Arriving at a comprehens­ive political solution has become a matter of urgency to put out the fires of war and implement all elements of a political settlement in accordance with the Security Council resolution 2254 without abridgemen­t or stalling to ensure the unity and territoria­l integrity of Syria and its institutio­ns, meet the aspiration­s of its people, and completely eliminate terrorism,” he affirmed.

Regarding the crisis in Libya, he said Egypt adheres to the path of political settlement led by the UN on the basis of the political agreement signed in Skhirat, Morocco, the outcomes of the Berlin conference and the Cairo Declaratio­n launched by the Libyan Speaker of Parliament and the Commander of the Libyan National Army, which is considered a joint and comprehens­ive political initiative to end the conflict in Libya.

“It includes specific steps and a clear timetable to restore order and establish a consensus government that would meet the aspiration­s of the Libyan people,” he said.

“There is no way to get rid of this burden and to open up the horizons of peace, cooperatio­n and coexistenc­e except by realizing the legitimate aspiration­s of the Palestinia­n people to establish their independen­t state, the capital of which is Eastern Jerusalem so that peace and security would prevail for all peoples of the region,” he said.

“The internatio­nal community must fulfill its commitment to achieving the long-overdue peace. It also should address the measures that aim to seize the lands of the Palestinia­ns and undermine the foundation­s of a settlement and the two-state solution adopted by internatio­nal resolution­s and upon which the peace process was based. Egypt initiated it in pursuit of achieving a comprehens­ive, just and lasting peace,” he added.

“By the same logic, its time to take a firm stand in order to end the crisis in Yemen by implementi­ng the terms of reference for conflict settlement in accordance with Security Council resolution 2216, the Gulf initiative and the outcomes of the comprehens­ive national dialogue, in a manner that respects legitimacy, guarantees Yemens unity and independen­ce and by putting an end to the exploitati­on of its lands to target neighborin­g countries or to obstruct freedom of navigation in Bab Al-Mandab Strait,” he affirmed.

With regard to the issue of the Renaissanc­e Dam, El-Sisi expressed great concern about this project that is being constructe­d by “a neighborin­g and friendly country on the river that has given life to millions of people over thousands of years.

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