Lebanon army says arrested suspects in rocket fire at Israel

W460

The Lebanese army has arrested several people suspected of firing rockets at Israel from Lebanon, with a security official telling AFP that three Hamas members were among those held.

Despite a November 27 ceasefire that sought to halt more than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, including two months of all-out war, rockets were fired at Israel on March 22 and 28.

No group admitted being behind the attacks, and Hezbollah denied any involvement.

However, Hezbollah's Palestinian allies Hamas had claimed to have fired rockets at Israel from Lebanon several times before the ceasefire.

In a statement Wednesday, the Lebanese army said it had identified "the group responsible" and that it was "composed of Lebanese and Palestinians".

It said it had arrested "several members of the group" while "the search continues to arrest other individuals involved".

The security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "Lebanese army intelligence services have arrested three members of Hamas."

Two of those detained were Palestinian and one was Lebanese, the official said, adding that they were arrested in Beirut and south Lebanon on Tuesday and Wednesday.

They are "suspected of being involved in firing rockets at Israel", the official added.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun had previously said of the attacks that "Hezbollah is not responsible".

Israel's response to the rocket fire was to bombard Hezbollah's bastion in the southern suburbs of Beirut on March 28 for the first time since the November ceasefire began.

Hezbollah was badly weakened by the war and says it is abiding by the ceasefire, despite Israel continuing to target it with regular strikes.

On Wednesday, the health ministry in Beirut said Israeli strikes killed two people in the south, while Israel said it killed two Hezbollah members.

Hezbollah began firing across the border at Israel in October 2023 in solidarity with its ally Hamas after the Gaza war erupted.

Last September the conflict erupted into open warfare, with Israel killing Hezbollah's then leadership and more than 4,000 people.

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