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Beirut files complaint with UN Security Council about Israeli flyovers

The Lebanese government charges that the Israeli Air Force is being used to “terrorize civilians and spread fear.”

Israeli soldiers prepare an F-16 jet
Members of the Israel Defense Forces prepare an F-16I fighter jet at the Ramat David Airbase near Haifa before it leaves for maneuvers above Lebanon. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.

The Lebanese government has filed a complaint with the U.N. Security Council after Israeli Air Force fighter jets repeatedly broke the sound barrier over Beirut, the country’s LBC TV channel reported on Monday.

The protest, which was filed by Beirut’s mission in New York at the instruction of Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib, accuses Israel of “blatant violations of the country’s sovereignty and airspace.”

The IAF flyovers “terrorize civilians and spread fear,” Beirut states, claiming that the Jewish state’s actions violate U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the Second Lebanon War in August 2006.

Lebanon’s complaint further asserts that Jerusalem’s military activities “violate international humanitarian law by engaging in practices that amount to collective punishment and psychological intimidation.”

Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorists have attacked Israel’s north almost every day from Southern Lebanon since joining the war in support of Hamas on Oct. 8, firing thousands of drones, rockets and missiles—primarily towards northern Israel—that have killed more than 40 people and caused widespread destruction to homes, commercial buildings, farmland and the environment.

In response, Israeli jets have carried out thousands of raids on terror infrastructure in Southern Lebanon and other Hezbollah strongholds.

U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701 called on the government in Beirut to disarm the Iranian proxy. The 2006 resolution also states that Hezbollah is forbidden to operate anywhere near the border with Israel.

“Diplomatic cover cannot be a shield for terror activity,” said Israel’s Foreign Ministry.
Former senior Shin Bet officials tell JNS that the group’s terror army and civil governance can only be dismantled by the IDF.
“We will not rest on our laurels, and when we see a threat, we will act with full force,” Israel’s top spy concluded.
The bomb, which according to media reports was attached to a Palestinian flag, was defused.
Security officials warn mass unrest could erupt within days as economy deteriorates.
The conduct of the Iranian-backed terrorist organization is undermining the ceasefire against Lebanon’s interests, said Gideon Sa’ar.