
Foreign nationals told to leave Lebanon as war fears surge
The Hindu
Urgent calls for foreign nationals to leave Lebanon amid escalating tensions between Israel, Iran, and Hezbollah.
Urgent calls for foreign nationals to leave Lebanon grew on August 4 with France warning of "a highly volatile" situation as Iran and its allies ready their response to high-profile killings blamed on Israel.
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah movement, which has traded near-daily fire with Israeli forces since the Gaza war broke out in October, announced its fighters had fired a barrage of rockets at Israel's north overnight.
The Israeli military said 30 projectiles were launched from Lebanon, with most of them intercepted.
With Israel on high alert anticipating major military action from Tehran-aligned armed groups including Hezbollah and Hamas, medics and police said two people were killed on August 4 in a stabbing attack in a Tel Aviv suburb.
The assailant, a Palestinian from the occupied West Bank, was "neutralised" by police and taken to hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
Israeli forces meanwhile kept bombarding the Gaza Strip, witnesses and officials in the besieged Hamas-ruled territory said, with no end in sight to the nearly 10-month war triggered by the Palestinian militant group's October 7 attack on southern Israel.
France, Canada and Jordan were among the latest governments to call for their citizens to leave Lebanon.