Hezbollah fires dozens of rockets at Israel after IDF jets strike deep into Lebanon
The Lebanon-based Hezbollah militant group said today that it had fired more than 100 Katyusha rockets at several northern Israeli military posts in response to Israeli strikes of the Beqaa Valley region the previous night.
The Israeli military said no “damage or casualties were immediately reported,” after it detected “approximately 100 rocket launches” from Lebanon.
In a separate statement, the IDF confirmed that its fighter jets had struck two Hezbollah sites in the Beqaa Valley, which lies deep in Lebanon’s center.
“The sites belong to Hezbollah’s aerial forces that planned and carried out various attacks against the State of Israel,” the statement said.
Houthi rebels fired missiles at container ship, CENTCOM says
Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired two anti-ship ballistic missiles at a Liberian-flagged container ship in the Red Sea but did not hit the vessel, U.S. Central Command said today.
Yahya Sarea, a spokesperson for the group, had earlier said the group had hit the Pinocchio, which he called “American.”
But according to shipping databases operated by Equasis and the United Nations’ International Maritime Organization (IMO), it is a Liberian-flagged container ship owned by Singapore-registered company OM-MAR 5 INC.
The incident came after CENTCOM said it conducted six self-defense strikes on Houthi controlled areas of Yemen yesterday. An unmanned underwater vessel and 18 anti-ship missiles were destroyed, CENTCOM said, adding that they presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and U.S. Navy ships in the region.
Gaza aid ship sets sail from Cypus port
An Open Arms aid vessel, pictured here in the Cypriot port of Larnaca yesterday, has set sail this morning for Gaza.
The ship is carrying 200 tons of food aid provided by World Central Kitchen as part of a pilot project to open a new maritime humanitarian corridor.

Rising concerns over tensions in East Jerusalem as Ramadan begins with no cease-fire in sight
JERUSALEM — The sun was shining over the streets of Jerusalem’s Old City today as the first full day of Ramadan began — but with no cease-fire in sight, the war in Gaza cast a heavy shadow over the start of the holy month, with fears of tensions rising around the revered Al-Aqsa mosque.
Israeli border police patrolled the streets of the Old City’s Muslim quarter — an area that is usually bustling with people and adorned with lights, lanterns and decorations during Ramadan.

It was markedly quiet today, with no signs of celebration as small groups of worshippers made their way to Al-Aqsa, the third-holiest site in Islam, for noon prayers.
For Muslims around the world, Ramadan is “the most important month for us,” shopkeeper Jamil Halwani said. But this year, he said, the usual “joy of Ramadan,” a time of fasting, prayer, service, introspection and gathering, was absent.
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