Hezbollah strikes Israeli military command center with artillery, rockets

Fighters from the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah have struck Israeli military positions close to the border between Lebanon and the 1948 occupied territories.

Lebanon’s Arabic-language al-Manar television channel, citing a Hezbollah statement released on Saturday, reported that the group launched projectiles at a command center belonging to the Israeli army at Biranit barracks in northern Israel, causing casualties in the targeted area.

The Lebanese resistance fighters also struck positions in the Khirbat Maer Israeli post near the border.he Israeli army later stated that shells were fired at the Shomera area in northern Israel, and that it responded with artillery fire.

Israeli shelling, meanwhile, targeted the outskirts of the southern Lebanese border towns of Tayr Harfa, Naqoura, Maroun al-Ras, Yaroun, Blida, Alma al-Shaab and al-Qawzah, al-Manar TV said.

The artillery and rocket strikes were conducted as Israel keeps bombing the besieged Gaza Strip after a seven-day truce with the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas ended.

Hezbollah also announced the death of one more of its fighters, identified as Khodor Abboud, who hailed from the southern Lebanese town of Deir Ames.

On Friday, Hezbollah said two of its members were among three people killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon.

The group in separate statements identified the members killed as Mohammad Mazraani and Wajih Msheik.

A source close to the group said Mazraani was killed in his home along with his mother Nasifa.

The Israeli regime has been waging sporadic attacks on southern Lebanon since October 7, when it launched a devastating war against the besieged Gaza Strip.

Hezbollah has mounted near daily rocket attacks on Israeli positions at the border, while Israel has conducted air and artillery strikes in southern Lebanon.

Senior Hezbollah politician Hassan Fadlallah has said the group was vigilant and ready after the Hamas-Israel truce ended.

“In Lebanon, we are concerned in facing this challenge, being vigilant, and always ready to confront any possibility and any danger that may arise in our country,” he said.

“No one thinks that Lebanon has been spared from this Zionist targeting or that what is happening in Gaza cannot affect the situation in Lebanon,” Fadlallah noted.

Israel Recalls Negotiation Team From Qatar After Dead End In Hostage Talks

Israel Recalls Negotiation Team From Qatar After Dead End In Hostage Talks

Both sides have blamed each other for the breakdown of the truce

Jerusalem:

Israel and Hamas brushed off international calls to renew an expired truce Saturday as air strikes pounded targets in Gaza and Palestinian groups launched volleys of rockets.

Smoke again clouded the sky over the north of the Palestinian territory, whose Hamas government said 240 people had been killed since a pause in hostilities expired early Friday and combat resumed.

In Israel, the military’s Home Front Command reported 40 missile alerts in the south and centre of the country, and the Palestinian groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad announced “rocket barrages” against three Israeli municipalities near Gaza.

According to the United Nations, an estimated 1.7 million people in Gaza — around 80 percent of the population — have been displaced by eight weeks of war.

Fadel Naim, chief doctor at the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City, said his morgue had received 30 bodies since the morning, including seven children.

“The planes bombed our houses: three bombs, three houses destroyed,” Nemr al-Bel, 43, told AFP, adding he had counted 10 dead in his family and “13 more still under the rubble”.

The population is short of food, water and other essentials, and many homes have been destroyed. UN agencies have declared a humanitarian catastrophe, although some aid trucks did arrive Saturday.

After the truce between Israel and Hamas expired on Friday, Israel had told NGOs not to bring aid convoys across the Rafah border crossing from Egypt, the Palestine Red Crescent Society had said.

But on Saturday, in a social media post, the charity said its Egyptian colleagues had managed to send over a number of trucks.

Both sides blamed each other for the breakdown of the truce, which had enabled the release of 80 Israeli hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners.

The truce had been brokered with the help of Qatar, backed by Egypt and the United States, but on Saturday Israel said it was withdrawing its negotiators from Doha after reaching a dead end in talks aimed at securing a renewed pause in hostilities.

“Following the impasse in the negotiations and at the direction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, David Barnea, head of the Mossad, ordered his team in Doha to return to Israel,” the Israeli leader’s office said.

French President Emmanuel Macron appealed for “stepped-up efforts to reach a lasting ceasefire” to free all hostages, allow in more aid and to assure Israel of its security.

During an unprecedented attack on October 7, Hamas fighters broke through Gaza’s militarised border into Israel, killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took around 240 Israelis and foreigners hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

Israel vowed to eliminate Hamas in response and unleashed an air and ground campaign that has killed more than 15,000 people, also mostly civilians, the Hamas authorities who run Gaza say.

Since the end of the pause, Israel’s air, naval and ground forces have attacked more than 400 targets in Gaza, the army said on Saturday. The figure is roughly in line with the daily average number of strikes prior to the pause, according to military figures released previously.

Warplanes hit “more than 50 targets in an extensive attack in the Khan Yunis area” of Gaza’s south, the military added.

Separately, members of an Israeli armoured brigade “eliminated terrorist squads and directed fire against terrorist targets in the north of the Gaza Strip”, the military said.

Since the truce expired, Hamas has fired rockets from Gaza towards Israel.

International leaders and humanitarian groups condemned the return to fighting.

“I deeply regret that military operations have started again in Gaza,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on X, formerly Twitter.

Fighting also resumed on Israel’s northern border.

The Lebanese group Hezbollah, which like Hamas is backed by Iran, said two of its members were killed Friday in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, as its fighters resumed attacks against Israeli targets following the end of the truce.

Israel’s military said its artillery struck the sources of “launches” from Lebanon.

Syria said Israel carried out air strikes near Damascus on Saturday. A British-based war monitor said the strikes on “Hezbollah sites” killed two Syrian pro-Hezbollah fighters.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard accused Israel of killing two of its members in Syria who it said had been on an “advisory mission”.

Hamas in October last year said it had restored relations with Syria’s government. Israeli attacks on targets in Syria have intensified since the Israel-Hamas war began.

The week of hostage-prisoner exchanges yielded tearful reunions of Israeli families with their released relatives and jubilation in the streets of the Israeli-occupied West Bank as Palestinians walked free from Israeli jails.

Twenty-five other hostages, mostly Thais, were also freed in separate arrangements.

The Israeli army on Friday said 136 hostages were still being held in Gaza, including more than a dozen women.

The end of the pause meant bitter disappointment for the families of those still not freed.

“We saw a chance for people to come out, be reunited with their families and resume their old lives,” said Ilan Zharia, the uncle of Eden Yerushalmi, 20, one of the women still held captive.

Romania said it had been told by Israel that a Romanian-Israeli hostage had died in Gaza.

The Israeli military has published a map of “evacuation zones” in Gaza that it said would enable residents to move “from specific places for their safety if required”.

Residents in various areas of Gaza were sent SMS messages on Friday warning that “a crushing military attack on your area” was coming, with the aim of eliminating Hamas.

But the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, questioned the usefulness of the map, which it said does not specify where people should go.

“It is unclear how those residing in Gaza would access the map without electricity and amid recurrent telecommunications cuts,” OCHA added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Stage set for counting of votes in erstwhile Karimnagar

Stage is all set for the counting of votes of 13 assembly constituencies of erstwhile Karimnagar district

Published Date – 07:29 PM, Sat – 2 December 23


Stage set for counting of votes in erstwhile Karimnagar

Arrangements made for the counting of votes in SRR Government college, Karimnagar.

Karimnagar: Stage is all set for the counting of votes of 13 assembly constituencies of erstwhile Karimnagar district on Sunday. Election authorities made elaborate arrangements for counting.

The counting of four assembly segments including Karimnagar, Choppadandi, Manakondur and Huzurabad of Karimnagar district will be held at SRR Government College, Karimnagar.


Arrangements for counting of Jagtial, Koratla and Dharmapuri segments of Jagtial district are made at VRK Engineering College, Jagtial. Ramagundam, Manthani and Peddapalli constituencies’ counting will be held in JNTU Engineering College, Manthani.

Counting of Vemulawada and Sircilla constituencies will be held at SC Welfare Gurukulam School, Sircilla.

Initially, postal ballots and emergency services votes will be counted after the beginning of counting at 8 am. Later, EVMs will be opened. Besides a postal ballot counting table, 14 counting tables have been arranged for each assembly constituency and the process will be completed in 18 to 20 rounds depending on constituency.

A counting supervisor and counting assistant have been deployed for each table. Besides a team of micro observers, three each of reserved teams and postal ballot teams were deployed for each constituency.

On the other hand, police made tight security arrangements to complete the counting process in a peaceful manner. Three level security arrangements were made at each counting center.

Hezbollah strikes more Israeli sites on Lebanon border

The Islamic Resistance fighters continued on Saturday attacking the Israeli occupation sites on the Lebanon border.

Hezbollah military media issued a statement to clarify the details of the attack on ‘Khirbet Ma’er’.

The full text of the statement that was published on the Al-Manar English Website is as follows:

Hezbollah military media issued consecutive statements to clarify the details of the attacks on the enemy sites.

The first statement mentioned that the Islamic Resistance fighters targeted on Saturday, December 2, 2023 at 11:00, the artillery bunkers in ‘Khirbet Ma’er’ Site with missiles, scoring direct hits.

The Islamic Resistance fighters targeted at 12:50 PM on Saturday, December 2, 2023, Al-Raheb site and its protector with appropriate weapons, resulting in a direct hit, the second statement read.

The third statement indicated that the Islamic Resistance fighters targeted at 12:50 PM on Saturday, December 2, 2023, the headquarters of the 91st Brigade at Branit military base with the appropriate weapons, resulting in a direct hit.

The Islamic Resistance fighters targeted at 01:40 PM on Saturday, December 2, 2023, the Rouweisat Al-Alam site in the occupied Shabaa Farms in Lebanon with the appropriate weapons, resulting in a direct hit, according to the fourth statement.

The fifth statement pointed out that the Islamic Resistance fighters targeted at 02:35 PM on Saturday, December 2, 2023, the Jal Al-Allam site with the appropriate weapons, resulting in a direct hit.

The Islamic Resistance also mourned its fighter Khodor Salim Abboud [Fidaa], from Deir ‘Ames, South Lebanon, who was martyred while performing his duties on the path of liberating Al-Quds.

On the other hand, the Israeli enemy bombarded several positions in southern Lebanon.

SD/IRN

Turkish president calls on ICC to hold Israel accountable

Speaking to journalists on board the presidential plane returning from Dubai, where he attended the COP28 climate summit, Erdogan emphasized the need for granting necessary punishments for those caught red-handed in the reported incidents in Gaza.

They will closely follow the proceedings in the Hague, Erdogan said, expressing hope that the decision would bring a sense of justice to those waiting.

Condemning Zionist actions in Gaza, he said, “This is state terrorism. We cannot stay silent against this state terrorism.”

The Netanyahu administration’s massacre in Gaza is etched in history as a “black stain,” Erdogan said, adding that the countries unconditionally supporting this are “stained as well.”

The world will never forget the indifference shown by these states and international organizations, he added.

“Zionist officials, who have been known as victims of genocide, have now turned into killers of their ancestors,” he noted.

The Zionist forces resumed bombing the Gaza Strip early Friday after declaring an end to a week-long humanitarian pause with the Palestinian resistance group, Hamas.

At least 178 Palestinians were killed and 589 injured on Friday in Zionist airstrikes, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

The humanitarian pause began on Nov. 24 as part of an agreement between Israel and Hamas to temporarily halt fighting to allow hostage swaps and aid delivery.

More than 15,000 Palestinians, mostly children and women, have been killed in Israeli attacks since Oct. 7 following a cross-border attack by Hamas.

Around 1,200 Zionist regime soldiers and Zionist settlers were killed, according to official estimates.

SD/PR

Israel Recalls Negotiation Team From Qatar After Dead End In Hostage Talks

Israel Recalls Negotiation Team From Qatar After Dead End In Hostage Talks

Both sides have blamed each other for the breakdown of the truce

Jerusalem:

Israel and Hamas brushed off international calls to renew an expired truce Saturday as air strikes pounded targets in Gaza and Palestinian groups launched volleys of rockets.

Smoke again clouded the sky over the north of the Palestinian territory, whose Hamas government said 240 people had been killed since a pause in hostilities expired early Friday and combat resumed.

In Israel, the military’s Home Front Command reported 40 missile alerts in the south and centre of the country, and the Palestinian groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad announced “rocket barrages” against three Israeli municipalities near Gaza.

According to the United Nations, an estimated 1.7 million people in Gaza — around 80 percent of the population — have been displaced by eight weeks of war.

Fadel Naim, chief doctor at the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City, said his morgue had received 30 bodies since the morning, including seven children.

“The planes bombed our houses: three bombs, three houses destroyed,” Nemr al-Bel, 43, told AFP, adding he had counted 10 dead in his family and “13 more still under the rubble”.

The population is short of food, water and other essentials, and many homes have been destroyed. UN agencies have declared a humanitarian catastrophe, although some aid trucks did arrive Saturday.

After the truce between Israel and Hamas expired on Friday, Israel had told NGOs not to bring aid convoys across the Rafah border crossing from Egypt, the Palestine Red Crescent Society had said.

But on Saturday, in a social media post, the charity said its Egyptian colleagues had managed to send over a number of trucks.

Both sides blamed each other for the breakdown of the truce, which had enabled the release of 80 Israeli hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners.

The truce had been brokered with the help of Qatar, backed by Egypt and the United States, but on Saturday Israel said it was withdrawing its negotiators from Doha after reaching a dead end in talks aimed at securing a renewed pause in hostilities.

“Following the impasse in the negotiations and at the direction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, David Barnea, head of the Mossad, ordered his team in Doha to return to Israel,” the Israeli leader’s office said.

French President Emmanuel Macron appealed for “stepped-up efforts to reach a lasting ceasefire” to free all hostages, allow in more aid and to assure Israel of its security.

During an unprecedented attack on October 7, Hamas fighters broke through Gaza’s militarised border into Israel, killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took around 240 Israelis and foreigners hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

Israel vowed to eliminate Hamas in response and unleashed an air and ground campaign that has killed more than 15,000 people, also mostly civilians, the Hamas authorities who run Gaza say.

Since the end of the pause, Israel’s air, naval and ground forces have attacked more than 400 targets in Gaza, the army said on Saturday. The figure is roughly in line with the daily average number of strikes prior to the pause, according to military figures released previously.

Warplanes hit “more than 50 targets in an extensive attack in the Khan Yunis area” of Gaza’s south, the military added.

Separately, members of an Israeli armoured brigade “eliminated terrorist squads and directed fire against terrorist targets in the north of the Gaza Strip”, the military said.

Since the truce expired, Hamas has fired rockets from Gaza towards Israel.

International leaders and humanitarian groups condemned the return to fighting.

“I deeply regret that military operations have started again in Gaza,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on X, formerly Twitter.

Fighting also resumed on Israel’s northern border.

The Lebanese group Hezbollah, which like Hamas is backed by Iran, said two of its members were killed Friday in Israeli strikes on Lebanon, as its fighters resumed attacks against Israeli targets following the end of the truce.

Israel’s military said its artillery struck the sources of “launches” from Lebanon.

Syria said Israel carried out air strikes near Damascus on Saturday. A British-based war monitor said the strikes on “Hezbollah sites” killed two Syrian pro-Hezbollah fighters.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard accused Israel of killing two of its members in Syria who it said had been on an “advisory mission”.

Hamas in October last year said it had restored relations with Syria’s government. Israeli attacks on targets in Syria have intensified since the Israel-Hamas war began.

The week of hostage-prisoner exchanges yielded tearful reunions of Israeli families with their released relatives and jubilation in the streets of the Israeli-occupied West Bank as Palestinians walked free from Israeli jails.

Twenty-five other hostages, mostly Thais, were also freed in separate arrangements.

The Israeli army on Friday said 136 hostages were still being held in Gaza, including more than a dozen women.

The end of the pause meant bitter disappointment for the families of those still not freed.

“We saw a chance for people to come out, be reunited with their families and resume their old lives,” said Ilan Zharia, the uncle of Eden Yerushalmi, 20, one of the women still held captive.

Romania said it had been told by Israel that a Romanian-Israeli hostage had died in Gaza.

The Israeli military has published a map of “evacuation zones” in Gaza that it said would enable residents to move “from specific places for their safety if required”.

Residents in various areas of Gaza were sent SMS messages on Friday warning that “a crushing military attack on your area” was coming, with the aim of eliminating Hamas.

But the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, questioned the usefulness of the map, which it said does not specify where people should go.

“It is unclear how those residing in Gaza would access the map without electricity and amid recurrent telecommunications cuts,” OCHA added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Hyderabad: ShiftED 2023 conclave to be held at JRC Conventions

Students and parents attending the event can get firsthand information on the universities, courses, eligibility criteria, visa application process, scholarships.

Published Date – 07:24 PM, Sat – 2 December 23


Hyderabad: ShiftED 2023 conclave to be held at JRC Conventions

Students and parents attending the event can get firsthand information on the universities, courses, eligibility criteria, visa application process, scholarships.

Hyderabad: Planning to pursue higher education from the US universities or looking for education loan providers to fund your education abroad? Then head to ShiftED 2023 conclave scheduled for Sunday at JRC Conventions and Trade Fairs at Jubilee Hills.

The GradRight, a Hyderabad-based Ed-FinTech company, is bringing together prospective students, 16 prominent universities and education loan providers on a single platform to aid students make right choices of college and financing options.


Over 30 deans and admission directors of universities including Johns Hopkins University, University of Pennsylvania, and City University of New York will take part in the day-long event for which there is no entry fee but registration is a must.

Students and parents attending the event can get firsthand information on the universities, courses, eligibility criteria, visa application process, scholarships.

The event will provide an opportunity for prospective students to interact with participating universities alumni and current students. Eleven panel discussions including Women in STEM have been scheduled in the event. Students can look forward to loan offers from education loan providers such as MPOWER, HDFC Credila, and ICICI that are taking part in the event.

“ShiftED is a showcase of our proposition for students, universities and financing institutions and marks the start of a movement that has the potential to shape the future of global higher education,” said Aman Singh and Sasidhar Sista, cofounders, GradRight.

Pro-Palestine protester sets self on fire outside Israel consulate in Georgia


Helpless palestinian children cry as they wait for attendance in a hospital in Gaza.

A pro-Palestine protester has set herself on fire outside the Israeli consulate in Atlanta, in protest against the regime atrocities in the besieged Gaza Strip.

As per police and fire department officials on Friday, the protester, whose identity remains undisclosed, was draped in the Palestinian flag and used gasoline for self-immolation. She was rushed to a nearby hospital in critical condition with serious burns.

A security guard who tried to intervene also sustained burns to his arm and leg and has been hospitalized.

Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum emphasized the self-immolation of the protester was not an act of terrorism, and there were no threats against the Israeli consulate which was in no danger.

The incident comes amid a wave of pro-Palestine protests across the US and beyond. Thousands have marched in Washington, DC, Ohio, Utah, and California against the Israeli regime forces siege on the innocent people of the Gaza Strip.

Similar protest marches have been held in major cities of countries across the globe. The protesters demand a ceasefire in Gaza as the regime forces continue pounding the Palestinians in the region with nonstop airstrikes, shelling, and direct ground attacks.

Meanwhile, the US government has openly extended its full support to Israelis as they continue their genocidal campaign in Gaza.

The Israeli assault, which started on Oct. 7 after Palestinian resistance groups carried out an anti-Israeli operation in response to decades of Zionists’ atrocities, has led to the deaths of over 15,500 Palestinians, mostly women and children. Thousands more are missing and feared to be dead under the rubble.

Last week, a ceasefire had allowed for the exchange of hundreds of captives and prisoners from both sides. The Israeli regime has blocked the entry of water, food, power, and fuel to the people trapped in Gaza.

Rare rock art site found at Ratnapur in Medak district

The rock site had a Bhairava painting, which probably belonged to the Mesolithic Period (10,000 years ago).

Published Date – 07:16 PM, Sat – 2 December 23


Rare rock art site found at Ratnapur in Medak district

Rock Paintings of Ratnapur in Shivvampet Mandal of Medak district.

Medak: The members of Kotha Telangana Charitra Brundam (KTCB) claimed to have identified a new rock art site at Ratnapur village in Shivvampet Mandal on Friday.

The team headed by KTCB founder Sriramoju Haragopal, Vemuganti Murali and others visited the site following information from the locals. Haragopal said the rock site had a Bhairava painting, which probably belonged to the Mesolithic Period (10,000 years ago). Since the site was used as a canvas by people who lived close over the years, Haragopal said there were paintings belonging to the Neolithic period and until the medieval period (16th Century AD) as well.


There were ruins of a Vaishnavite temple just 300 metres away from the rock art site. The place where the Vaishnavite temple ruins were found is called Tirumalaya Banda. The historians also claimed to have found several tools made of rock very close to the site. They believe that there was a factory for making tools during the Mesolithic age. Haragopal said there was a need to carry out a detailed study on the site to find more evidence.

TSRTC announces special tour package for ‘Karthika Masam’

TSRTC officials said the special buses were being introduced for the convenience of the citizens who regularly plan pilgrimage to the prominent temples in the neighbouring State

Published Date – 07:16 PM, Sat – 2 December 23


TSRTC announces special tour package for ‘Karthika Masam’


Hyderabad: On the occasion of Karthika Masam, the Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) has announced an exclusive tour package to those intending to visit ‘Pancharama Kshetras’ or the ‘Pancharamas’, the five ancient Hindu temples dedicated to Lord Shiva in Andhra Pradesh.

The temples include Amararama temple in Amaravati, Bhimeshwara temple in Draksharamam, Somarama temple in Bhimavaram, Ksheerarama temple in Palakollu and Kumararama temple in Samalkot.


RTC officials said the special buses were being introduced for the convenience of the citizens who regularly plan pilgrimage to the prominent temples in the neighbouring State during the auspicious month of Karthika.

The buses will be available on two Sundays i.e December 3 and 10. Officials said the ticket fare is Rs.3,400 per person for super luxury bus and Rs.4,000 per person for Rajadhani bus.

For further information contact: 9959226257 or 9959224911 or 9959226246 or 040-69440000 or 04023450033. Bookings can also be made at TSRTC counters or tsrtconline.in.