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Crowds in Beirut suburbs mourn Hezbollah commander killed in Israeli strike

Crowds in Beirut suburbs mourn Hezbollah commander killed in Israeli strike
Hezbollah supporters carry the coffins of one of Hezbollah fighters who killed with Hezbollah's chief of staff, Haytham Tabtabai in Sunday's Israeli airstrike during their funeral procession, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 24, 2025. (Photo: AP/Hussein Malla)

BEIRUT: Hundreds of people gathered in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Monday (Nov 24) to mourn Hezbollah’s top military commander Haytham Ali Tabtabai and four other fighters killed in an Israeli strike on the city’s outskirts the previous day.

The targeted assassination by Israel - a type of operation that had become rarer since a ceasefire was agreed last year - came a day after Lebanon marked its Independence Day and deepened fears of a renewed Israeli escalation.

As the mass funeral snaked its way through neighbourhoods in the Lebanese capital's southern suburbs on Monday, chants rang out against Israel and the United States. Both countries have been pressuring Lebanon to move faster to disarm Hezbollah, in line with the 2024 ceasefire agreement.

"We will not leave our weapons, we will not leave our land!" the mourners chanted. Top Hezbollah political officials attended the funeral in person but it was unclear if any military officials were present.

ISRAEL TARGETS HEZBOLLAH'S NEXT GENERATION 

The November 2024 US-brokered ceasefire was meant to end a year of fighting between Hezbollah and the Israeli military, triggered by Hezbollah's rocket fire on Israeli posts a day after the Oct 7, 2023, attack by its Palestinian ally Hamas. 

During that war, Israel killed Hezbollah's then-leader Hassan Nasrallah, his expected successor and much of the group's top military brass.

Tabtabai, 57, rose through the ranks swiftly to fill roles left by slain commanders, according to the Israeli military and a Lebanese security source. After the truce, he was appointed the group's top military official and sat on its Jihad Council, the body responsible for military operations.

A Lebanese security source said Israel now appeared to be targeting the group's "next generation" after having killed most of the group's founding leadership.

"Israel is peeling them off layer by layer," said a Western diplomat who works on Lebanon.

An Israeli drone flies over Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, March 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

ISRAEL KEEPS UP SURVEILLANCE 

Israel has sustained near-daily strikes on Lebanon since the truce, targeting what it says are Hezbollah arms depots, fighters and efforts by the group to rebuild. It has ratcheted up the strikes in recent weeks.

"Anyone who raises his hand against Israel — his hand will be cut off," said Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz. "Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and I are determined to continue the policy of maximum enforcement in Lebanon and everywhere."

Israel has also continued to gather intelligence on Hezbollah's activities using surveillance drones, a Lebanese security source said. 

On Monday, Israeli drones flew over Beirut, Lebanon's south and its eastern Bekaa Valley, according to the source. Israel's advanced capabilities have worried Hezbollah's supporters. 

Malek Ayoub, a retired military analyst, told Hezbollah's Al Manar television station on Monday that Israel could be using facial recognition technology to identify Hezbollah figures from the station's coverage of Tabtabai's funeral.

"Artificial intelligence can identify any of those faces to build Israel's bank of targets," Ayoub said.

Source: Reuters/fs/fh
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