French soldier killed in attack on UN mission in southern Lebanon, officials say

French soldier killed in attack on UN mission in southern Lebanon, officials say

April 18 (Reuters) - A French soldier was killed and three others wounded while clearing a road in southern Lebanon ‌in an attack that UNIFIL peacekeepers and French officials ‌said on Saturday was likely carried out by Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Reuters

In calls with Lebanese ​President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, French President Emmanuel Macron condemned the "unacceptable attack", his office said in a statement.

Three other members of the United Nations' UNIFIL peacekeeping mission were injured, UNIFIL ‌said, two of ⁠them seriously.

UNIFIL said initial assessments indicated the fire came from non-state actors, allegedly Hezbollah, and that an ⁠investigation had been launched into what it called "a deliberate attack."

Macron also said the evidence so far pointed to the Iran-backed armed group ​and urged ​Lebanese authorities to act against ​those responsible.

Advertisement

French armed forces minister ‌Catherine Vautrin said the patrol was ambushed while on a mission to open a route to a UNIFIL post that had been isolated by fighting in the area.

The soldier was killed by direct small-arms fire, she said. UNIFIL said the attack occurred ‌in the southern Lebanese village of ​Ghandouriyeh.

Lebanon's army condemned the shooting and said ​it had opened an ​investigation. President Aoun offered condolences and ordered an ‌immediate probe, while Prime Minister Salam ​also condemned the ​attack.

UNIFIL was first deployed in 1978 and has remained through successive conflicts, including a 2024 war during which its ​positions came under ‌repeated fire.

(Reporting by Enas Alashray in Cairo, Tassilo Hummel in ​Paris and Olivia Le Poidevin in Geneva. Editing by ​Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Mark Potter)

Post a Comment

0 Comments