US urges Israel to stop shooting at UN peacekeepers in Lebanon
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US urges Israel to stop shooting at UN peacekeepers in Lebanon

 Following two incidents in 48 hours, US President Joe Biden has stated that he is "absolutely, positively" urging Israel to cease firing at UN peacekeepers during its conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon.


Two Sri Lankan soldiers serving with the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (Unifil) were injured in the incident, and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) claimed responsibility for it on Friday.

The Israeli army said that IDF soldiers near the Unifil base in Naqoura saw a threat and fired, adding that the incident would be looked into "at the highest levels."

Two Indonesian Unifil soldiers were injured on Thursday when they fell from an observation tower after an Israeli tank shot at it.

In a joint statement, the leaders of France, Italy, and Spain said that Israel's actions were unjustifiable and needed to stop right away.

Sri Lanka's unfamiliar service said it "unequivocally denounces" the IDF assault which harmed two of its warriors.

Although he did not assign blame for the incidents, the head of UN peacekeeping stated that there was probable direct firing on UN positions in southern Lebanon.

"For instance we have a situation where a pinnacle was hit by a fire and furthermore harms to cameras at one of the positions - which clearly to us particularly seemed to be immediate fire," Jean-Pierre Lacroix told the BBC's Newshour program.

The IDF and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah continued to fire missiles and rockets across the border between Israel and Lebanon as Israel's invasion of southern Lebanon continued.

On Friday, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) stated that they had detected approximately 100 rockets entering northern Israel from Lebanon within half an hour. Two automated airborne vehicles (UAVs) were distinguished intersection from Lebanon, one of which was captured, the IDF said.

At Israeli raid on the city of Sidon in southern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese ministry of health, resulted in the deaths of three people, including a two-year-old girl. Two Lebanese troopers were killed after Israeli powers designated a military post in the town of Kafra in southern Lebanon, the Lebanese armed force said.

Emergency workers continued to sift through the rubble of buildings destroyed by two Israeli air strikes on Thursday in Beirut, the capital.

The attacks, according to Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, came without warning, killed 22 civilians and injured 117 others. Israel has not remarked.

As they escalated their response to Hezbollah's rocket fire, Israeli forces last month launched a ground invasion into southern Lebanon.

Since Hamas, a Palestinian armed group based in the Gaza Strip, carried out a deadly attack in southern Israel in October, Hezbollah and Israel have exchanged near-daily cross-border fire.

According to the IDF, the UN post that was attacked on Friday in Naqoura was about 50 meters (164 feet) away from the source of the threat that soldiers had identified. It said it had advised peacekeeping soldiers to remain in safeguarded spaces at that point.

According to Unifil, Israeli military vehicles had broken through barriers at a different UN site in Labbouneh, which is closer to Israel's border.

The episodes addressed a "serious turn of events", it said.

Mikati said Friday's assault was "a wrongdoing which is aimed at the worldwide local area". Israel claims that Unifil has not stabilized the region, and as a result, it has requested that peacekeepers move northward so that it can confront Hezbollah.

Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, has reiterated Israel's request for Unifil personnel to "avoid danger" by withdrawing 5 kilometers (3 miles) north, but UN Secretary-General Jean-Pierre Lacroix has stated that they will remain in position.

Around 10,000 peacekeepers from 50 nations are positioned in Lebanon, close by around 800 non military personnel staff.

They have been on patrol in the region between the Litani River and the "Blue Line," a UN-recognized border between Lebanon and Israel, since 1978.

The day after Hamas' fatal attack on southern Israel, Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel. The Iranian-backed group says it is supporting the Palestinians and will stop firing if Israel and Hamas in Gaza agree to a ceasefire.

Throughout the course of recent weeks, Israel has emphatically raised its mission against Hezbollah, escalating air strikes against southern Lebanon and southern pieces of Beirut, killing Hezbollah's chief Hassan Nasrallah and sending off a ground intrusion.

Lebanon claims that hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced and over 2,000 people have been killed, primarily as a result of the most recent escalation. Israeli authorities claim that two Israeli civilians and a Thai national were killed this week by Hezbollah rocket fire. In a different improvement on Friday, Gaza's Hamas-run common guard organization was cited by the AFP news organization as saying something like 30 individuals were killed in Israeli strikes in the Jabalia town and displaced person camp in the north of the Palestinian territory.

The IDF has not addressed the matter.

In the meantime, Doctors Without Borders (MSF), a medical aid organization, stated that "thousands are trapped" in the Jabalia refugee camp, including five of its employees.

According to the MSF, Israeli forces issued evacuation orders on October 7 in Jabalia "while simultaneously carrying out attacks," making it unsafe for people to leave.

Dr Mohammed Salha, the acting head of the al-Awda Clinic in Jabalia, told the BBC's Newshour program the region had been under attack for seven days.

Due to the fact that Israeli forces were "cutting Jabalia from the rest of Gaza," he warned that the hospital would run out of fuel on Saturday.

Dr. Salha stated, "There is no medication, medical supplies, clean water, or fuel, so there is pressure on these people to move and go directly to the south."

In recent days, dozens of people have been reported killed or wounded in northern Gaza as a result of Israel's new ground operation, which it claims is aimed at regrouping Hamas fighters in preparation for attacks.

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