Photo taken yesterday shows a car damaged by Hezbollah
rockets in northern Israel. Eight people were killed and dozens wounded in
massive rocket attacks by Lebanese Hezbollah on northern Israel yesterday, local
media said. -Xinhua
Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz yesterday evening ordered the army to
prepare for a new phase of its military offensive in southern Lebanon to push
the area of its control to Lebanon's Litani River, Channel Two television
reported.
Peretz has asked the army to prepare for a possible push north to Lebanon's
Litani River, about 30 kilometers from the border, to stop Hezbollah rocket
fire, said the TV report.
Peretz's spokesman confirmed that the army has received orders from the
Defense Minister to prepare for an eventual seizure of southern Lebanon up to
the Litani River.
Such an operation means extending Israel's control past the security zone it
used to hold before its withdrawal in May 2000. Reports reaching here from
Beirut said Israeli planes on Thursday dropped flyers on southern part of the
Lebanese capital, near the international airport, urging civilians to leave as
"bombing of the area would be extended".
Peretz's decision was made in response to the Hezbollah rocket attacks
Thursday which claimed some eight people's lives in northern Israel, newspaper
Ha'aretz quoted military officials as saying, adding the move still requires the
approval of the security cabinet and need a further call-up of reservist
soldiers. Meanwhile, dozens more wounded in a massive rocket barrage on northern
towns Thursday afternoon.
Three Israeli soldiers were also killed on Thursday in heavy fighting with
Hezbollah guerillas in southern Lebanon. Israeli police reported that 130
rockets were fired into Israel within 90 minutes on Thursday afternoon.
Five were killed in Acre when a rocket hit a nearby home while residents
stood on a balcony and three others were killed in rocket attacks near Ma'alot.
Violence between Israel and Lebanese Hezbollah erupted on July 12 after
Hezbollah guerillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed eight during
cross-border attacks.
Israel has waged a 23-day-old massive assault in Lebanon and expanded its
ground operations while Hezbollah has showered Israel with rockets.
In a video statement to a meeting of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC) on Thursday, Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora said that
over 900 people had been killed and about 3,000 people wounded in Israel's
over-three-week-old offensive. On the Israeli side, over 60 Israelis have also
been killed in the conflict, according to media counts.