Live Updates: More Wireless Devices Explode in Lebanon
For a second day, hand-held communication devices exploded across Lebanon and in the southern suburbs of the capital, Beirut, in an apparent attack on Hezbollah. At least nine people were killed and 300 injured, the Lebanese Health Ministry said.
A second wave of wireless device explosions rocked Lebanon on Wednesday afternoon, killing nine people and wounding 300 others, government officials said. The apparently coordinated attack came as the country reeled from a similar operation the day before that blew up thousands of pagers belonging to members of the militant group Hezbollah.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the latest attack. Lebanese, U.S. and other officials briefed on the matter say that Israel was responsible for the deadly pager blasts on Tuesday, which blew up the hand-held devices across Lebanon in their owners’ hands and pockets.
I was at the funeral in Beirut’s southern suburbs for two Hezbollah fighters, a paramedic and a 12-year-old boy who were killed by exploding pagers a day before when we heard a loud explosion. There was chaos everywhere as a loudspeaker called for people to remove the batteries from their phones.
Reporting from Tel Aviv
Israel's defense minister, Yoav Gallant, said the “center of gravity” of Israel’s war with its enemies is “moving north,” referring to the country’s northern border with Lebanon. Gallant said he estimates the countries are now found “at the outset of a new period in this war,” according to a statement by his office. He did not explicitly mention the explosions in Lebanon or claim Israeli responsibility.
The United Nations Security Council will convene an emergency meeting on Friday afternoon to discuss Israel’s wave of attacks in Lebanon, according to Slovenia, which holds the Council’s rotating presidency this month. The meeting was requested by Algeria, the only Arab country on the Council.
The U.N.’s special coordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, said she was “pained” by the additional casualties caused by the new wave of explosions on Wednesday. “Further escalatory actions risk devastating consequences,” she said on social media.
A video posted on social media and verified by The New York Times shows a fire breaking out at a residential complex in Haret Hreik, in Beirut.
At least nine people have been killed and more than 300 injured in the newest round of explosions, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. Ambulances clogged the roads and some hospitals in southern Lebanon were said to be overwhelmed with dozens of casualties, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency.
Fires have broken out in homes, cars and shops in several parts of Lebanon, including the Bekaa Valley, a rural area on the eastern border with Syria, and in the southern suburbs of Beirut, the Lebanese Civil Defense emergency rescue organization said.
The Hungarian government has distanced the country from reports that a Hungary-based company was involved in the production of the pagers that exploded on Tuesday in Lebanon. In an emailed statement, the government said that “the company in question is a trading intermediary, with no manufacturing or operational site in Hungary. It has one manager registered at its declared address, and the referenced devices have never been in Hungary.”
Mortada Smaoui, 30, a resident of Beirut’s southern suburbs, said that another wave of simultaneous explosions had struck his neighborhood. “There are buildings burning right now in front of me,” Smaoui, 30, said, adding that firefighters and soldiers were rushing to the scene.
Hezbollah has claimed its first cross-border strike since the series of pager blasts, striking on Wednesday afternoon what it said were Israeli artillery positions with rockets. The attacks did not appear to be part of the expected retaliation for the explosions a day earlier, and the group said it came in response to Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon.
The United Nations’ human rights chief, Volker Türk, has criticized the pager attack as a violation of international law and called for those behind it to be held to account. “Simultaneous targeting of thousands of individuals, whether civilians or members of armed groups, without knowledge of who was in possession of the targeted devices, their location and their surroundings at the time of the attack, violates international human rights law,” he said in a statement.
Ayman Safadi, the Jordanian foreign minister, blamed Israel for the attack on Hezbollah pagers and said it was increasing the likelihood of a military escalation. “Israel is pushing the entire region toward the abyss of regional war,” Safadi told reporters. “Such a war would have drastic ramifications not only for the region, but for the world.”
Mourners gathered in the village of Saraain on Wednesday for the funeral of the youngest confirmed victim of the pager attack in Lebanon: 9-year-old Fatima Abdullah.
“The enemy killed us using this small device!” mourners chanted as they made their way through the dry grass of a cemetery. “They killed our child Fatima!”
In the 1990s, before the widespread use of cellphones, pagers were the main way to reach people with urgent messages.
But pagers, which relay short messages over radio frequencies, quickly became less useful as mobile phones got smaller and more versatile. For the most part, the advent of do-everything smartphones made them obsolete.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said the United States did not know about the pager attack in advance and was not involved. “We are still gathering the information and gathering the facts,” he said at a news conference in Cairo with his Egyptian counterpart, Badr Abdelatty. Blinken said the U.S. has been “very clear about the importance of all parties avoiding any steps that could further escalate the conflict that we’re trying to resolve in Gaza.”
Israel’s police and Shin Bet intelligence service identified the target of an attempted bombing in Tel Aviv last year as Moshe Yaalon, a former Israeli military chief of staff and defense minister. The incident is back in the spotlight amid the pager attacks, and after the Israeli military said on Tuesday that Hezbollah operatives had been behind the bombing attempt.
The death toll in the pager attacks has risen to 12, Lebanon’s health minister, Firass Abiad, told a news conference. The dead include two young children as well as a civilian health worker, he said.
Nearly 2,800 patients were rushed to hospitals within 30 minutes of the explosions on Tuesday afternoon, Abiad said, with most of the injuries happening in the Beirut area. Older people and children were among the injured, whose numbers swamped Lebanon’s hospitals. Nearly 300 people had critical injuries — mostly wounds to the eyes, face and limbs — while others lost hands or fingers, he said.
Men from the most effective military force in Lebanon bleeding on the street and sprawled out in hospital beds, wounded not on the battlefield, but by devices carried in their pockets and worn on their belts.
This carnage, the result of what Lebanese, American and other officials have called an Israeli operation to remotely detonate hundreds of pagers carried by Hezbollah fighters, damaged and humiliated the group, puncturing its aura as one of the Middle East’s most sophisticated anti-Israel forces.
NEWS ANALYSIS
Israel’s attack on pagers belonging to Hezbollah on Tuesday was a tactical success that had no clear strategic effect, analysts say.
While it embarrassed Hezbollah and appeared to incapacitate many of its members, the attack has so far not altered the military balance along the Israeli-Lebanese border, where more than 100,000 civilians on either side have been displaced by a low-intensity battle. Hezbollah and the Israeli military remained locked in the same pattern, exchanging missiles and artillery fire on Wednesday at a tempo in keeping with the daily skirmishes fought between the sides since October.
Meanwhile in Gaza, the fighting continues between Israel and Hamas. Four Israeli soldiers were killed and four others severely injured in the southern Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said Wednesday. In northern Gaza, the Palestinian Civil Defense — a branch of the Hamas-run Interior Ministry — announced that two people had been killed and several others wounded in an airstrike in Gaza City. It did not say whether the victims were combatants or civilians.
Countries in the Middle East are sending medical aid to Lebanon amid the sudden surge in casualties. Iranian medical teams arrived in Lebanon on Wednesday to assist in treating the injured, and Iran pledged to evacuate patients with severe eye injuries to Tehran for specialized treatment, according to Lebanon’s foreign minister, Abdallah Bou Habib. An Iraqi military plane carrying medical supplies also arrived in Beirut, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.
Exchanges of fire along the Israel-Lebanon border continued Wednesday morning at what appeared to be their usual tempo. The Israeli military said it had conducted air and artillery strikes on several Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon. Sirens sounded in several villages in northern Israel, signaling rocket fire from Lebanon.
Gold Apollo, a Taiwanese company that American and other officials named as the supplier of pagers used in attacks in Lebanon that killed at least 11 people, sought on Wednesday to distance itself from the devices.
American and other officials briefed on the attack had said that Israel had inserted explosive material into a shipment of pagers from Gold Apollo, in an apparently coordinated operation aimed at Hezbollah.
Lebanon’s health minister, Firass Abiad, said on Tuesday evening that health officials were directing injured people to medical facilities outside of Beirut and its southern suburbs, where hospitals are overwhelmed, state news media reported. One of the hospitals, the American University of Beirut Medical Center, said earlier that it had received more than 160 “seriously injured” people in the span of three hours.
Israel carried out its operation against Hezbollah on Tuesday by hiding explosive material within a new batch of Taiwanese-made pagers imported into Lebanon, according to American and other officials briefed on the operation.
The pagers, which Hezbollah had ordered from Gold Apollo in Taiwan, had been tampered with before they reached Lebanon, according to some of the officials. Most were the company’s AR924 model, though three other Gold Apollo models were also included in the shipment.
Our Coverage of the Middle East Crisis
Deadly Pager Attack: Hundreds of pagers carried by Hezbollah members exploded simultaneously across Lebanon, a day after Israeli officials said they were ready to step up attacks against the Iranian-backed militia.
Netanyahu Considers Firing Gallant: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel is reportedly contemplating dismissing his defense minister, Yoav Gallant, a move that would remove a frequent critic at a time of mounting tensions with Hezbollah.
Hamas’s Future in Gaza: One of Hamas’s most senior officials said in an interview that the militant group expects to play a decisive role in the enclave when the war with Israel is over.
A Struggle to Celebrate: Since the Oct. 7 attacks and the start of the war in Gaza, marking major holidays has been completely upended for three religions in the region.
How UNRWA Became a Flashpoint: The U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees has survived 75 years of Israeli-Palestinian strife. Can it survive the latest conflict?
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