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    Nine killed and more than 300 injured, says Lebanon health ministry, after walkie-talkies explode – Middle East live

    By Léonie Chao-Fong (now); Amy Sedghi Martin Belam and Jonathan Yerushalmy (earlier),

    10 hours ago

    4.56pm BST

    More than 30 ambulances have been deployed to “multiple explosions” in Lebanon’s south and east, the Lebanese Red Cross said.

    In a post on X, it said 50 additional ambulances have been put on alert to support rescue and evacuation operations.

    4.50pm BST

    Nine killed and more than 300 wounded in latest Lebanon blasts – health ministry

    Nine people were killed and at least 300 injured as a result of the explosions targeting walkie-talkies across Lebanon on Wednesday afternoon, Lebanon’s health ministry said.

    The ministry added that first responders had almost finished transferring people to hospitals.

    Updated at 4.56pm BST

    4.45pm BST

    Solar power systems exploded in homes across Lebanon – report

    Several solar power systems exploded in people’s homes across Lebanon, according to the National News Agency, injuring at least one girl in the town of al-Zahrani in south Lebanon.

    Pictures of exploded solar panels, fingerprint readers and other devices circulated through social media, though it was unclear if they blew up by themselves or were simply near walkie-talkies which blew up.

    While paramedics rushed to evacuate wounded from affected areas, a group of men attacked a UN peacekeeping (Unifil) patrol transiting through the city of Tyre in south Lebanon.

    A video showed men throwing stones at two Unifil armored personnel carriers on the side of one of the main thoroughfares in the southern Lebanese city.

    Unifil spokesperson Andrea Teneti told the Guardian:

    The situation is under control right now. The Lebanese armed forces intervened but this is a serious breach of our freedom of movements.

    He added that no injuries occurred, just material damages.

    Updated at 4.50pm BST

    4.40pm BST

    The UN secretary general, António Guterres , held a briefing before news of the latest wave of device blasts across Lebanon on Wednesday that officials say has killed at least three people and wounded more than 100.

    Guterres said it was “very important” that civilian objects should not be weaponised after 12 people were killed and up to 2,800 were wounded in Tuesday’s pager blasts.

    The UN chief said the explosions on Tuesday confirmed “a serious risk of a dramatic escalation in Lebanon”, and warned that “everything must be done” to avoid the escalation. He added:

    What has happened is particularly serious, not only because of the number of victims that it caused, but because of the indications that exist that this was triggered, I would say, in advance of a normal way to trigger these things, because there was a risk of this being discovered.

    Updated at 4.42pm BST

    4.30pm BST

    According to Lebanon’s official news agency, home solar energy systems exploded in several areas of Beirut on Wednesday.

    4.20pm BST

    As my colleague William Christou reported earlier, a video shows a blast occurring while a funeral for Hezbollah fighter killed on Tuesday during the pager attacks takes place in the southern suburb of Beirut.

    In the video, a blast occurs somewhere on a Hezbollah member’s body, knocking him to the ground and sending the crowd around him running.

    4.08pm BST

    Hundreds wounded in latest Lebanon blasts – report

    Hundreds of people were wounded in the latest blasts involving walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah on Wednesday, a security source told Reuters.

    Many of the wounds were to the stomach and hands, the source said.

    Updated at 4.33pm BST

    3.54pm BST

    Lebanon ’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) has reported that three people were wounded in the Bekaa region in the east of the country in the latest device blasts.

    The Guardian has been unable to independently verify this.

    Updated at 4.57pm BST

    3.45pm BST

    Reuters reports that security sources have shared that dozens of people were injured by the new explosions in Lebanon on Wednesday.

    We will bring you more details as they emerge.

    3.41pm BST

    Prior to reports of further explosions on Wednesday afternoon, UN secretary general António Guterres warned that pager blasts targeting militant group Hezbollah on Tuesday indicated “a serious risk of a dramatic escalation in Lebanon and everything must be done to avoid that escalation”.

    “Obviously the logic of making all these devices explode is to do it as a pre-emptive strike before a major military operation,” he told reporters, according to Reuters.

    3.38pm BST

    The US issued a new round of Iran sanctions on Wednesday targeting 12 individuals who it said were tied to Tehran ’s “ongoing, violent repression of the Iranian people,” including its “brutal crackdown on peaceful protests.”

    The sanctions, which come two years after the death of Kurdish-Iranian woman Mahsa Amin in police custody, target members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) , Iranian prison officials “and those responsible for lethal operations overseas,” the US Treasury Department said in a statement, reports Reuters.

    3.34pm BST

    Reuters are also reporting that the communication devices that exploded on Wednesday afternoon were handheld radios . The news agency cites a security source and witness for the information.

    According to its sources, Reuters reports that at least one of the blasts heard took place near a funeral organised by Hezbollah for those killed the previous day when thousands of pagers used by the group detonated across Lebanon .

    Updated at 3.37pm BST

    3.24pm BST

    Second wave of explosions across Lebanon target Hezbollah walkie-talkies

    Reporting from Beirut, William Christou writes:

    Explosions targeting walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah have gone off in multiple cities across Lebanon, with initial reports of an unknown number of casualties.

    A source in Hezbollah confirmed that walkie-talkies used by the group were targeted in the attack. A senior security source said that the explosions were “small in size”, similar to yesterday’s attacks.

    The wide-ranging attack occurred just a day after more than 2,800 were injured and 12 killed by exploding pagers all over Lebanon. Both Hezbollah and the Lebanese government blamed Israel for the attack, with the former promising a “fair punishment” for the explosion.

    Pictures showed broken and singed communication devices amid scenes of destruction. The Guardian saw multiple pictures of an ICOM IC-V82 two-way radio that had seemingly exploded.

    In a video, a member of Hezbollah in the southern suburb of Beirut is taking part in a funeral for fighters killed yesterday when a blast occurs somewhere on his body, knocking him to the ground and sending the crowd around him running.

    Israel has not claimed responsibility for either of the two days’ attacks, but reporting suggests the country managed to place explosives in thousands of pagers bought by Hezbollah.

    Updated at 3.57pm BST

    3.15pm BST

    More blasts heard in Beirut a day after pager explosions

    Reuters journalists in Beirut ’s southern suburbs heard at least two contained blasts in separate parts of the suburbs on Wednesday.

    It was not immediately clear what had caused the explosions but they came a day after pagers used by armed group Hezbollah detonated across Lebanon .

    We will bring you more details as they emerge.

    Updated at 3.17pm BST

    3.02pm BST

    Israeli strike on school building kills 5 people, says Gaza's civil defence agency

    Gaza ’s civil defence agency said on Wednesday that an Israeli airstrike on a school turned shelter killed five people, while the Israeli military said it targeted Hamas militants, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

    “Five martyrs and a number of wounded were recovered after the occupation targeted Ibn Al-Haytam school in the Shujaiya neighbourhood” of Gaza City , the agency said in a statement.

    The Israeli military said the air force “conducted a precise strike on Hamas terrorists” in a compound that “previously served as the ‘Ibn Al-Haytam’ school in the area of Gaza City”.

    The military’s statement said Hamas fighters used the school “to plan and carry out terrorist activities against (Israeli) troops and the State of Israel”.

    According to AFP, the military did not provide a death toll but said “numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians, including the use of precise munitions, aerial surveillance and additional intelligence”.

    It is the latest in a series of Israeli strikes on school buildings housing displaced Palestinians.

    On Saturday the civil defence agency said five people were killed in a strike on Gaza City’s Shuhada al-Zeitun school , which the Israeli military said was also used by Hamas militants.

    Another strike on the UN -run Al-Jawni school in central Gaza on 11 September drew international outcry after the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) said six of its staffers were among the 18 reported fatalities.

    The Israeli military accuses Hamas of hiding in school buildings where many thousands of Palestinians have sought shelter – a charge denied by the Palestinian militant group.

    Updated at 3.06pm BST

    2.33pm BST

    UN high commissioner for human rights demands accountability for Lebanon pager blasts

    Those responsible for a deadly wave of explosions across Lebanon targeting paging devices used by members of the Hezbollah militant group “must be held to account”, the UN high commissioner for human rights said on Wednesday.

    “Simultaneous targeting of thousands of individuals, whether civilians or members of armed groups, without knowledge as to who was in possession of the targeted devices, their location and their surroundings at the time of the attack, violates international human rights law and, to the extent applicable, international humanitarian law,” Volker Türk said in a statement, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

    Updated at 2.35pm BST

    2.24pm BST

    Hezbollah says it attacked Israeli military posts in first cross-border attack since pager blasts

    Reuters is reporting that Lebanon ’s Hezbollah said on Wednesday that it had attacked Israeli artillery positions with rockets in the first cross-border attack since the Tuesday pager blasts.

    Updated at 2.25pm BST

    2.04pm BST

    Emanuel Fabian, military correspondent at the Times of Israel, has reported that a barrage of 10 rockets was fired from Lebanon at western Galilee around an hour ago. According to the IDF, he wrote , the rockets struck open areas, causing no injuries.

    2.02pm BST

    Irish foreign minister Micheál Martin: pager detonation showed 'wanton disregard' for civilian lives in Lebanon

    Irish foreign minister Micheál Martin has said that the pager detonations in Lebanon showed a “wanton disregard” for the lives of civilians, and said it was a “logical conclusion” that Israeli forces were behind the incident. Israel has not claimed responsiblity for the attack, which injured nearly 3,000 people and killed at least 12 people, including two children.

    The tánaiste said “The nature of the attack illustrates a wanton disregard for the lives of people because these pagers with explosives put into them went off in public areas and supermarkets and around people going out about their daily lives. It meant that many innocent civilians – men, women and children – were caught up in this.”

    PA Media reports that asked if he considered it to be a breach of Geneva conventions rules on indiscriminate attacks, Martin replied: “In my view, yes, absolutely.”

    Martin continued:

    I would appeal to the Israeli Government to desist and not to engage in war in Lebanon and likewise to Hezbollah to desist and not to do anything to further escalate the situation. That kind of warfare and the creation of that terror in the midst of communities, commercial areas and normal human behaviour is unacceptable.

    Earlier Ireland’s taoiseach Simon Harris said it was an “extraordinarily worrying development.”

    He said:

    What we have seen is significant explosions in civilian areas, including in a supermarket, and we’ve seen very distressing and upsetting scenes of civilians and children being caught up in the situation.

    What the Middle East needs to see is de-escalation, not escalation, and as I get ready to go to the UN general assembly next week, that’s certainly the message that Ireland will be taking to that. We all must work to step back from the brink in terms of the Middle East.

    Obviously a country’s rights to defend itself, a country’s rights to address terrorism, is a legitimate right, but when explosives are being detonated, civilians being impacted, and take place in locations with many many civilians, it’s extraordinarily concerning.

    1.54pm BST

    EU's Borell: pager detonations had 'heavy, indiscriminate collateral damages among civilians'

    The EU’s top diplomat has described the pager detonations in Lebanon as “extremely worrying”, and said they had caused “heavy, indiscriminate collateral damages among civilians.”

    In a statement, Josep Borrell said :

    Following yesterday’s series of explosions in Lebanon, I called the Lebanese foreign minister Abdallah Bou Habib. He briefed me on the explosion of a high number of electronic devices in many areas across the country. Thousands of people were injured – hundreds in critical condition – hospitals are collapsing.

    Even if the attacks seem to have been targeted, they had heavy, indiscriminate collateral damages among civilians: several children are among the victims

    I consider this situation extremely worrying. I can only condemn these attacks that endanger the security and stability of Lebanon, and increase the risk of escalation in the region.

    The European Union calls on all stakeholders to avert an all-out war, which would have heavy consequences for the entire region and beyond.

    1.45pm BST

    Lebanon's health ministry: 460 people required surgery for injuries after pager detonations

    Lebanon ’s state national news agency reports that according to health ministry statistics among the near 3,000 people injured after the pager detonations yesterday, 1,800 people were hospitalised, and 460 required surgery for severe injuries.

    Caretake health minister Firas Abiad said that while some patients are being evacuated to Syria and potentially Iran, 92% of cases will be treated within Lebanon.

    1.25pm BST

    Egypt’s foreign minister Badr Abdelatty has said in a joint press conference with US secretary of state Antony Blinken that Hamas has confirmed to Egypt its full commitment to the ceasefire agreement that was agreed on 27 May and to the amendments made on 2 July.

    1.13pm BST

    Hungarian entity that Taiwanese pager company said it authorised to produce and sell devices denies making them

    Lili Bayer in Brussels and Michael Safi report for the Guardian:

    The CEO of a Hungarian entity which a Taiwanese company said it had authorised to produce and sell pagers has denied making the devices, saying she was just an “intermediate.”

    Gold Apollo , a Taiwan-based company, said in a statement today that it had a partnership with the Budapest-based BAC Consulting KFT , and had authorised BAC “to use our brand trademark for product sales in designated regions, but the design and manufacturing of the products are solely the responsibility of BAC.”

    “Regarding the AR-924 pager model mentioned in the recent media reports, we clarify that this model is produced and sold by BAC. Our company only provides the brand trademark authorization and is not involved in the design or manufacturing of this product,” it added.

    BAC Consulting was registered in Hungary in 2022 and provided a Budapest address on its website – the same address used by multiple companies.

    On its website, which was live early Wednesday but later became unavailable, BAC Consulting provided long yet vague descriptions of its work.

    “With over a decade of consulting experience, we are on an exciting and rewarding journey with our network of passionate experts with a hunger for innovation and discovery for the Environment, Innovation & Development, and International Affairs,” according to the company’s LinkedIn page.

    Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono presents herself on LinkedIn as the CEO of the company. Her LinkedIn page describes her as a native speaker of both Hungarian and Italian.

    Bársony-Arcidiacono and BAC Consulting did not respond to questions from the Guardian. Reached by phone, Bársony-Arcidiacono asked how the paper got the number and then hung up.

    However, she confirmed to NBC that her company worked with Gold Apollo.

    Asked about the pagers and the explosions, Bársony-Arcidiacono said: “I don’t make the pagers. I am just the intermediate. I think you got it wrong.”

    Asked about the Hungarian company, EU foreign affairs spokesperson Peter Stano said at a press conference on Wednesday: “let’s not jump to conclusions at this stage.”

    “The reasons and how it was done, how it was organised, needs to be investigated,” he said.

    Asked about the CEO’s claim on LinkedIn that she also works for the European Commission, a spokesperson said “she is not a staff member, never been.”

    Updated at 1.42pm BST

    1.05pm BST

    Egypt will not accept any changes to border security arrangements with Gaza

    Egypt’s foreign minister Badr Abdelatty has ruled out his country accepting any changes to the agreed border security arrangements with Gaza, including the operation of the Rafah crossing.

    Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu appears in recent weeks to have made continued Israeli control of the Philadelphi corridor , a ribbon of land about nine miles (14km) in length and 100 metres wide along Gaza’s border with Egypt which includes the Rafah crossing, a condition of any ceasefire agreement. It was seized by Israel in May this year as its Gaza ground offensive pushed into Rafah.

    Interactive

    12.57pm BST

    Blinken: 15 out of 18 paragraphs of Gaza ceasefire proposal are agreed

    US secretary of state Antony Blinken has stated that 15 out of 18 paragraphs of a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas have been agreed, and insisted that progress on negotiations had been made during the last few weeks, despite there being no respite in Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip, or any sign of the impending release of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas.

    Speaking in Cairo, where he described Egypt as a critical partner in the ceasefire negotiations, Blinken said closing the gap on the last three paragraphs was a matter of “political will”.

    12.54pm BST

    Blinken: US is still gathering the facts about Lebanon pager explosions

    Secretary of state Antony Blinken has said that the US did not know about the pager explosions in Lebanon in advance, and said his country was still gathering the facts about the blasts.

    Speaking in a joint appearance in Cairo with Egypt’s foreign minister Badr Abdelatty, Blinken cautioned everyone in the region to avoid taking steps that could escalate the conflict.

    Yesterday nearly 3,000 people were injured and 12 killed, including two children, by the detonation of pagers inside Lebanon. The attack, which appears to have been chiefly aimed at Hezbollah operatives, has been widely attributed to Israel. Israel has not claimed responsibility, and Benjamin Netanyahu’s government seldom comments on Israeli operations carried out outside its borders.

    12.40pm BST

    Israeli media is reporting that Israel is deploying its 98th Division to the north of the country nearer to Lebanon.

    It had previously been deployed to the Gaza Strip, fighting in Khan Younis until late August. Haaretz reports that the deployment is intended “to prevent a wide-scale attack” by Hezbollah in the north. The Lebanese-based group has threatened retaliation for the pager explosions in Lebanon yesterday which Hezbollah has attributed to Israel. The division is believed to have between 10,000 and 20,000 troops.

    In another development, the Times of Israel reports that a planned memorial ceremony this evening for IDF soldiers which was due to have speeches by defense minister Yoav Gallant and chief of the IDF northern command Maj Gen Ori Gordin, has been postponed “in accordance with an assessment of the situation.”

    12.35pm BST

    A little more detail on the updated casualty count from the pager detonations in Lebanon , which officials say has now killed 12 people, including two children. Lebanon’s health ministry said 2750 to 2800 people were wounded, of which 300 people are said to be in a critical condition. This is higher than the earlier reported figure of 200.

    12.23pm BST

    Lebanese minister Nasser Yassin, who heads up the country’s disaster response committee, has said that yesterday’s pager explosions were “another severe test of our preparedness”, and praised the way that emergency services coped with the sudden influx of casualties.

    Lebanon’s state news agency quoted Yassin saying that at an emegency meeting on Wednesday morning the committee “assessed the situation in light of the major Israeli aggression that targeted Lebanese civilians.”

    Yassin added “We extend our condolences to the families of the martyrs and wish the wounded a speedy recovery.”

    He said:

    Yesterday, the health sector, medical teams, ambulance services, the civil defence, the Red Cross, and other emergency groups did a tremendous job. They demonstrated the importance of our country’s emergency preparedness. In a matter of minutes, nearly 3,000 injuries were treated in hospitals and ambulances. This was a remarkable achievement.

    However, there were challenges, especially in transporting patients between hospitals, triaging the injured, and relocating them to other areas. There was also a shortage of ophthalmologists and eye surgeons. What happened yesterday was a real war, similar to what we experienced during the Beirut Port explosion . Yesterday’s attack was another severe test of our preparedness.

    Yassin also said the committee discussed “potential scenarios in case the aggression expands, something we’ve been preparing for over recent months with regular updates to our contingency plans”. He said the country had food supplies for three months, and that 100 school locations had been identified as potential shelters.

    12.07pm BST

    In the UK the recently elected chair of parliament’s foreign affairs select committee has suggested that Israel’s allies need to be asking “What on earth are you doing?” after the pager detonation attack in Lebanon widely attributed to Israel.

    PA Media in the UK quotes Emily Thornberry , a Labour MP, saying:

    We are really concerned about what is happening now in Lebanon. I think the big question is: why? Why is this happening now? And what will the result of that be?

    It seems to be yet another escalation of the conflict which is happening in the Middle East, which will affect all of us. And it is very worrying indeed, of course it is, and what the response will be? And is this the first step, and what will Israel do next? Is it part of a larger plan?

    It is very worrying and I would certainly be expecting Israel’s friends to be speaking very seriously to them, and saying: ‘What on earth are you doing? Why is this happening now?’

    The UK’s Foreign Office has said “We continue to monitor the situation in Lebanon closely and the UK is working with diplomatic and humanitarian partners in the region. The civilian casualties following these explosions are deeply distressing. We urge calm heads and de-escalation at this critical time.”

    The UK recommended its nationals leave Lebanon in August due to rising tensions in the region.

    11.38am BST

    Israel is pushing the whole Middle East to the brink of regional conflict by maintaining a dangerous escalation on several fronts, Reuters reports Jordan’s foreign minister said on Wednesday.

    In remarks after an Islamic and Arab ministerial contact group meeting in Amman to lobby for a Gaza ceasefire, Ayman Safadi said peace would not prevail without a two-state solution. Safadi has kept the foreign ministry portfolio in a new Jordanian cabinet named today.

    11.37am BST

    Lebanon's health minister: two children among 12 dead from pager explosions

    The death toll from exploding pagers in Lebanon has risen to 12, and includes two children, Lebanese health minister Firass Abiad said on Wednesday, Reuters reports.

    About 3,000 people, including civilians, are reported to have been injured by the wave of explosions that struck Lebanon yesterday. While there has been no official claim of responsibility, the attack, which appears to have been chiefly aimed at Hezbollah operatives, has been widely attributed to Israel.

    Lebanon’s information minister Ziad Makary has said the country is preparing to put a complaint to the UN security council over the incident, which he called “a blatant attack on Lebanese sovereignty, that targeted civilians, not only Hezbollah members.”

    Lebanon has received medical aid today from Iran, Iraq and Jordan, and Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said his country rejects any attempts at escalation in the region, offering support to Lebanon. Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan conveyed his sadness over the deadly pager blasts to Lebanese prime minister Najib Mikati in a phone call. The Anadolu news agency reported that Erdoğan told Mikati that Israel’s attempts to spread conflicts in Gaza to the wider region were dangerous and that efforts to stop Israel would continue.

    Russia ’s foreign ministry has said the attack was “deliberately” designed to “provoke a major war in the Middle East”, and spokesperson Maria Zakharova described it as “yet another act of hybrid warfare against Lebanon which has harmed thousands of innocent people”, and demanded an investigation.

    Iran ’s foreign ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani described it as “terrorist operation … [that] contravenes all moral and human principles, international law, especially international humanitarian law, and warrants international criminal prosecution, trial, and punishment.”

    10.53am BST

    Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan conveyed his sadness over the deadly pager blasts in Lebanon to Lebanese prime minister Najib Mikati in a phone call on Wednesday, Reuters reports Turkey’s state-owned Anadolu news agency said.

    Erdoğan also told Mikati in the call that Israel’s attempts to spread conflicts in Gaza to the wider region were dangerous and that efforts to stop Israel would continue, Anadolu added.

    10.37am BST

    Lebanon preparing complaint to UN security council over pager detonations

    Lebanon’s minister of information has said the country is preparing to take a complaint to the UN security council over the mass detonation of pagers yesterday which killed at least nine people and injured nearly 3,000 others.

    Although there has been no official statement of responsibility, the attack has been widely attributed to Israel.

    Lebanon’s state national news agency reports that Ziad Makary described the explosions as “a blatant attack on the Lebanese sovereignty, that targeted civilians, not only Hezbollah members.”

    Makary said:

    What we fear is not Hezbollah, but Israel’s criminality, whether in Gaza or Lebanon. Lebanon is preparing a complaint to submit to the UN security council, and the ambassadors of certain states concerned with this never-ending conflict between Lebanon and the Israeli enemy will be summoned. The enemy does not care about anybody, not even about the constant and public US pressures. US diplomacy must intensify its pressures on Israel before it does on Hezbollah and Lebanon.

    10.32am BST

    In addition to an earlier statement by Russia’s foreign ministry that the detonation of pagers in Lebanon had been deliberately designed to “provoke a major war in the Middle East”, the Kremlin has additionally said that the incident could become a trigger for a wider regional conflict.

    Speaking in Moscow, Reuters reports Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told the media “The causes and circumstances of the incident must be established and those behind it must be identified.”

    According to a report in Tass, Peskov added “Of course, this should become a subject of study by specialists in order to take measures to eliminate similar risks here and in other places.”

    10.27am BST

    In its latest operational update on its official Telegram channel, Israel ’s military has said that in the last few hours it has intercepted a suspicious aerial target that crossed into Israel from the direction of Lebanon , and that Israeli fighter jets intercepted a UAV “that was approaching from Iraq ”.

    The claims have not been independently verified.

    10.09am BST

    Russia: pager detonations in Lebanon deliberately designed to 'provoke a major war' in Middle East

    Russia’s foreign ministry has said the attack on Lebanese group Hezbollah and others using exploding pagers was designed to “provoke a major war in the Middle East”. The detonation of the devices has been widely attributed to Israel.

    Maria Zakharova , spokesperson for the Russian foreign ministry, said in a statement:

    We regard what happened as yet another act of hybrid warfare against Lebanon, which has harmed thousands of innocent people. It appears that the organisers of this high-tech attack deliberately sought to foment a large-scale armed confrontation in order to provoke a major war in the Middle East.

    Earlier Zakharova said that the incident should be investigated, and said that the international community should be paying close attention to the event.

    At least nine people have been killed and nearly 3,000 wounded by the detonation of the pagers. Among the wounded was Iran’s envoy to Beirut.

    10.03am BST

    Reuters reports that a statement from the Egyptian presidency said president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi told visiting US secretary of state Antony Blinken that Egypt rejects any attempts at escalation in the region and that Egypt supports Lebanon after the pager blasts incident.

    10.00am BST

    The funeral of Fatima Abdallah , the 10-year-old girl killed during the wave of pager detonations that struck Lebanon yesterday afternoon, has been taking place in the village of Saraain in the Bekaa valley in Lebanon.

    The detonations have been widely attributed to Israel, although there has been no official confirmation from Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which rarely comments on Israeli operations outside its borders. At least nine people were killed and nearly 3,000 people were wounded in the blasts. About 200 of the wounded are reported to be in critical condition.

    9.50am BST

    US secretary of state Antony Blinken and his Egyptian counterpart Badr Abdelatty have met in Cairo. Blinken earlier met with Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi .

    Blinken will head from Cairo to Paris on Thursday for a meeting with the foreign ministers of France, Italy and Britain to discuss the Middle East and Ukraine and other issues, Reuters reports a state department official said. Blinken will also meet French President Emmanuel Macron, the official said.

    Blinken will not visit Israel on this trip to the Middle East, his tenth to the region since 7 October, and the first time he has not stopped in Tel Aviv as part of his intinerary.

    9.44am BST

    Russia ’s foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova , speaking in St Petersburg, has told the Russian media that “what happened [in Lebanon] yesterday requires an investigation and international attention to this issue.”

    9.24am BST

    The IDF has reported on its official Telegram channel that warning sirens are sounding in northern Israel .

    9.23am BST

    Palestinian news agency Wafa reports that medical crews have recovered ten bodies from areas north of Rafah in the Gaza Strip.

    8.49am BST

    In a statement on its official Telegram channel, Israel’s military has claimed that on Tuesday its air force struck “Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure sites in five different areas in southern Lebanon ,” and that additionally IDF artillery “struck in several areas in southern Lebanon.”

    In the statement the IDF said it “will continue to operate against the threat of the Hezbollah terrorist organisation in order to defend the state of Israel.”

    Thousands of people in Israel and Lebanon have been displaced from their homes after months of Hezbollah and Israel exchanging fire over the UN-drawn blue line that separates the countries.

    The IDF’s claims have not been independently verified.

    8.41am BST

    Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson has condemned the pager detonations in Lebanon as a “terrorist operation”, which he described as “a form of mass killing” and a contravention of “international humanitarian law”.

    Iran’s Tasnim news agency quotes Nasser Kanaani saying:

    [Tuesday’s] terrorist operation in Lebanon was carried out as a continuation of the Zionist regime’s combined operations and their mercenary agents. It contravenes all moral and human principles, international law, especially international humanitarian law, and warrants international criminal prosecution, trial, and punishment.

    This combined terrorist act, which is, in fact, a form of mass killing, once again clearly proves that the Zionist regime, in addition to committing war crimes and genocide against the Palestinian people, has placed regional and international peace and security in serious jeopardy. Accordingly, confronting the regime’s terrorist actions and the threats arising from it is an evident necessity, and the international community must act promptly to combat the impunity of the Zionist criminal officials.

    Iran’s government has promised support for Lebanon, and Al Jazeera reports that Iran’s Red Crescent has sent a medical delegation to Beirut to assist with the wounded. A shipment of medical aid from Iraq has also landed at Beirut International Airport. At least 200 of the nearly 3,000 people wounded in the attack are reported to be in critical condition.

    8.31am BST

    Lebanon ’s culture minister Judge Mohammad Wissam Al-Mortad has this morning issued a statement on social media, saying “In our struggle with the Israeli enemy, there are two truths: that its evil is limitless, and that our victory is undoubtedly coming. What [Israel] did yesterday provides evidence after evidence of its hostility to humanity, and of the resistance’s ability to stand firm on the road to victory. Israel’s days are numbered. May God have mercy on the martyrs, heal the wounded, and comfort the hearts.”

    8.14am BST

    Local Palestinian media is reporting that a 17-year-old child has been killed by Israeli security forces near Ni’lin , west of Ramallah , in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The claims have not been independently verified.

    7.39am BST

    Overnight Israel’s military announced the deaths of four soldiers.

    It takes the total number that Israel says have been killed in action since the start of the ground offensive in Gaza to 346.

    The claims have not been independently verified, and it has not been possible for journalists to verify casualty figures being issued during the conflict.

    7.25am BST

    Lebanon’s Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah will give a speech on Thursday, Reuters reports the group said in a statement on Wednesday.

    It follows pager detonations across Lebanon on Tuesday that killed nine people and injured about 3,000 others in what is widely regarded as an attack by Israel.

    7.10am BST

    Major airlines Lufthansa and Air France have announced suspensions of flights to Tel Aviv, Tehran and Beirut until Thursday as tensions in the region soared after pager explosions in Lebanon .

    German group Lufthansa said it was suspending all flights to Tel Aviv and Iran’s capital Tehran while French airline Air France suspended flights to the Israeli city and the Lebanese capital Beirut.

    “Due to the recent change in the security situation, the Lufthansa Group airlines have decided to suspend all connections to and from Tel Aviv (TLV) and Tehran (IKA) with immediate effect,” Lufthansa said in a statement.

    “This applies up to and including 19 September,” it said.

    “Due to the security situation at the destinations, Air France is suspending its connections from Paris-Charles de Gaulle and Beirut (Lebanon) and … Tel Aviv (Israel) until 19 September inclusive,” the French company said in statement sent to AFP.

    Air France said it would “evaluate daily the situation” in the Middle East and insisted that “the safety of our customers and crews is the absolute priority”.

    7.04am BST

    Antony Blinken arrives in Egypt

    US secretary of state Antony Blinken reportedly landed in Cairo early Wednesday, as part of a planned trip to the region to attempt to secure an elusive ceasefire in Gaza.

    On his 10th trip to the Middle East since the start of the war in Gaza nearly a year ago, Blinken will address negotiation efforts with Egyptian officials, according to the US state department. Those efforts were further complicated on Wednesday by the wave of pager blasts in Lebanon.

    Blinken is expected to meet with Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and hold a press conference with foreign minister Badr Abdelatty, but will not be visiting Israel during this round of diplomacy.

    US officials say privately that they do not expect any breakthroughs at Wednesday’s talks in Cairo, but Blinken’s visit will aim to keep up the pressure campaign for a deal between Israel and Hamas.

    “He’ll be meeting with Egyptian officials about a number of things, but squarely on the agenda is how we get a proposal that we think would secure agreement from both parties,” said US state department spokesperson Matthew Miller.

    6.51am BST

    After the wave of explosions across Lebanon, the influx of so many casualties has reportedly overwhelmed hospitals in Hezbollah strongholds.

    At one hospital in Beirut’s southern suburbs, an AFP correspondent saw people being treated in a car park on thin mattresses, with medical gloves on the ground and ambulance stretchers covered in blood.

    “In all my life I’ve never seen someone walking on the street … and then explode,” said Musa, a resident of the southern suburbs, requesting to be identified only by his first name.

    The 10-year-old daughter of a Hezbollah member was killed in east Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley when his pager exploded, the family and a source close to the group said.

    A son of Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Ammar was also among the dead, a source close to the group told AFP, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.

    Tehran’s ambassador in Beirut was wounded but his injuries were not serious, Iranian state media reported.

    In total, nine deaths have been reported with almost 3,000 injured.

    6.40am BST

    Hezbollah is known for using pagers to communicate because, unlike mobile phones, they can evade location-tracking and monitoring from Israeli intelligence.

    Yossi Melman, a co-author of Spies Against Armageddon, said “a lot of people in Hezbollah carried these pagers, not just top echelon commanders”.

    However, a security breach of this scale is seen by experts as hugely embarrassing and damaging to morale in the militant groups morale. Those wounded in the attack include Iran’s ambassador to Beirut, Mojtaba Amani, according to reports.

    “This would easily be the biggest counterintelligence failure that Hezbollah has had in decades,” said Jonathan Panikoff, the US government’s former deputy national intelligence officer on the Middle East.

    6.29am BST

    Pager manufacturer says devices used by Hezbollah were 'made in Europe'

    The Taiwanese manufacturer linked to pagers that exploded as part of a deadly attack against Hezbollah has said the devices were made by a company in Europe, as the militant group blamed Israel and vowed revenge attacks.

    Images of the pagers emerged in the aftermath with stickers on the back appearing consistent with pagers made by Taiwanese company Gold Apollo, according to analysis by Reuters.

    On Wednesday, the company’s founder Hsu Ching-Kuang, denied it had made the pagers, saying they were manufactured by a company in Europe that had the right to use its brand. “The product was not ours. It was only that it had our brand on it,’ he said. “We are a responsible company. This is very embarrassing,” he said.

    Related: Pagers in deadly attack on Hezbollah ‘made in Europe’, as Middle East braces for reprisals

    6.21am BST

    Hezbollah will continue operations in 'support of Gaza'

    Lebanon’s Hezbollah said early on Wednesday that it “will continue, as in all the past days, its blessed operations to support Gaza”, after a deadly wave of exploding pagers killed nine and injured thousands.

    “This path is ongoing and separate from the difficult reckoning that the criminal enemy must await for its massacre on Tuesday,” the group said in a statement issued on Telegram.

    Hundreds of pagers used by Hezbollah members exploded across Lebanon on Tuesday, with the group pinning the blame for the blasts on Israel.

    There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military on the wave of explosions, which came just hours after Israel announced it was broadening the aims of the war sparked by Hamas’s 7 October attacks to include its fight against Hezbollah along the country’s border with Lebanon.

    6.12am BST

    Welcome and summary

    Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s continuing coverage of the crisis in the Middle East.

    Hezbollah has said it “will continue” its operations to “support Gaza”, after a deadly wave of exploding pagers killed 9 people and wounded almost 3,000 more.

    “This path is ongoing and separate from the difficult reckoning that the criminal enemy must await for its massacre on Tuesday,” the group said in a statement issued on Telegram.

    Iran-backed Hezbollah has blamed Israel for the unprecedented security breach that saw thousands of pagers detonate across Lebanon . Israel’s military declined to comment on the blasts.

    More on this in a moment, first here’s a summary of the day’s other main events.

    • Among those killed on Tuesday was an 10-year-old girl, according to Lebanon’s health minister, Firass Abiad. The latest casualty figures by officials include about 2,750 wounded, with most injuries to the face and hands. Those wounded include Iran’s ambassador to Beirut, Mojtaba Amani.

    • Hezbollah fighters in Syria were also injured in the attack, with several reportedly being treated in hospitals in Damascus. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards-affiliated Saberin News reported that some guards in Syria had also been killed.

    • The pager explosions across Lebanon marked “an extremely concerning escalation , the UN’s special coordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, said. The spokesperson for the secretary general of the United Nations, Stéphane Dujarric, noted the “extremely volatile” context.

    • A Hezbollah official said the detonation of the pagers was the biggest security breach for the group in nearly a year of conflict with Israel. The blasts appeared to exploit the low-tech pagers that Hezbollah has adopted in order to prevent the targeted assassinations of its members. Lebanon’s foreign minister, Abdallah Bou Habib, said the country was bracing for a major retaliation by Hezbollah.

    • Hezbollah has vowed to retaliate against Israel. “We hold the Israeli enemy fully responsible for this criminal aggression that also targeted civilians,” a statement said. The son of the Hezbollah MP Ali Ammar reportedly also died in the explosions, as did two sons of other prominent Hezbollah figures.

    • There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military on the blasts. The attack took place just hours after Israel announced it was broadening the aims of the war sparked by the 7 October Hamas attacks to include its fight against Hezbollah.

    • Lebanon’s health ministry put hospitals across the country on “maximum alert” and instructed citizens to distance themselves from wireless communication devices. Schools in Lebanon will close on Wednesday.

    • The US government said it “was not aware of this incident in advance” . The state department spokesperson, Matthew Miller, told a briefing that Washington was not involved and did not know who was responsible. He added it was “too early to say” how it would affect Gaza ceasefire talks.

    • The Foreign Office has urged “calm heads and de-escalation” . An FCDO spokesperson said: “We continue to monitor the situation in Lebanon closely and the UK is working with diplomatic and humanitarian partners in the region. The civilian casualties following these explosions are deeply distressing.

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    Comments / 2
    Add a Comment
    Diane Richardson
    3h ago
    What they say about Mossad is true. They are the best spy agency in history. I really don't know what happened in April. I do know when Iran fired everything they had at Israel and nothing much happened, Iran was through. Israel has the right to be safe. The Jewish people have been through too much already.
    LEROY GOLDBERG
    9h ago
    Israel will continue their “operations” too. 😂 💥
    View all comments
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