Hezbollah confirms Nasrallah killed in Israeli strike

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Updated 28 September 2024
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Hezbollah confirms Nasrallah killed in Israeli strike

Hezbollah confirms Nasrallah killed in Israeli strike
  • Iran says senior commander killed in Israeli strike alongside Nasrallah
  • Israel army says ‘most’ senior Hezbollah leaders ‘eliminated’
  • Lebanese army took to the streets to prevent clashes between Nasrallah’s supporters and opponents

BEIRUT: Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah was killed following an Israeli attack on Beirut’s southern suburb on Friday evening, the organization has announced. Nasrallah, 64, led Hezbollah for nearly 30 years.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps said Abbas Nilforushan, deputy commander for its operations and for that of the Quds Force in Lebanon, also died in the strike.

Supporters of Hezbollah took to the streets where they had been displaced, expressing their deep sorrow over the killing. Heavy gunfire erupted in various neighborhoods and black flags were raised.

The Lebanese army took to the streets to prevent clashes between Nasrallah’s supporters and opponents, although several confrontations took place. 

A statement from Hezbollah praised Nasrallah’s “leadership, wisdom, and support for Palestine,” emphasizing that the party would “continue its struggle in confronting the enemy, in support of Gaza and Palestine, and in defense of Lebanon and its steadfast and honorable people.”

Nasrallah's supporters posted on social media calling for “unity to overcome this phase, even though the news was hard to believe.” Some speculated that Nasrallah’s death could be a turning point, even though the future was uncertain.

On Saturday, the Israeli military continued its pursuit of Hezbollah members and their supporters through intensive airstrikes and drone attacks.

In Lebanon, 11 people died and 19 others — including doctors, nurses and paramedics — were injured in offensives targeting civil defense centers and Islamic Health Organization clinics in Taybeh and Deir Siriane.

Those who fled their homes on Friday night following Israeli threats endured a tumultuous night filled with relentless shelling and assaults that persisted into the early morning.

The shocks continued with confirmation of Nasrallah’s death from the Israeli army, who used F15 warplanes in the attack. Some 85 bombs, each weighing one tonne, were deployed.

The Israeli army said the raids targeted “Hezbollah’s southern front commander Ali Karaki and several other leaders.”

Daylight revealed the scale of the devastation inflicted upon residential buildings, many of which were reduced to rubble.

A drone strike on a van on the Zahle road in the Bekaa Valey left its passengers injured, while another killed the owner of a vehicle in Daher El-Baydar.

An airstrike on the old Sidon road hit a residential apartment, killing three and injuring four, and there was a further attack in the Galerie Samaan area.

The targeted locations were key transit and supply routes for Hezbollah.

Iran Air suspended flights to Beirut following an incident in which the Israeli military breached the airport’s control tower.

The Israeli army issued a warning against allowing an Iranian civilian aircraft to land, stating that failure to comply would result in the use of force.

Minister of Transport Ali Hamieh instructed the airport to ask the plane “not to enter Lebanese airspace.”

The Israeli army said its air force targeted over 140 Hezbollah positions from late Friday into the early hours of Saturday.

The strikes affected not only the southern suburbs but also towns in the Bekaa Valley and areas in Mount Lebanon, including the outskirts of the Bhamdoun-Soufre road. Civil defense personnel were unable to extinguish the fire and one of its members was killed.

Those who fled during the night took to the sidewalks in the Sanayeh area of Beirut. Mosques and churches opened their doors to provide shelter, while schools were converted into accommodation centers.

The scenario was repeated in Shebaa, where the Israelis demanded that residents evacuate the area before subjecting the town to intense shelling.

It is believed this recent action is part of a broader effort to clear the border region of inhabitants ahead of a possible ground military operation.

The evacuations mitigated human losses to some extent. Meanwhile, casualties were reported due to airstrikes in northern and central Bekaa, where residents were not instructed to evacuate.

The Ministry of Health requested hospitals inside and around southern Beirut to move the wounded and sick to other hospitals in order to receive possible casualties.

Hezbollah, meanwhile, continued its military assaults on the Israeli side.

Media correspondents observed an uneasy calm along the front when Hezbollah announced Nasrallah’s death.

The militia launched an attack on several locations, including the settlements of Kabri, Sa’ar, Rosh Pina and Katzrin, the Ramat David military base and airport, the Sadah site, and a building in Ma’a lot, Western Galilee.

Sirens were activated in Safed and various towns throughout Upper Galilee.

According to Israeli Channel 12: “Sixteen rockets were launched from Lebanon targeting the Galilee region. One of these rockets landed in Nazareth Illit, located in the city of Acre.”

IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said: “We are on high alert around the clock. Difficult days are ahead of us, and this will take some time.”

He said: “Nasrallah, along with other leaders and the group's command center, were legitimate military targets under international law. Nasrallah was one of Israel’s fiercest enemies, and Israel is not seeking broader escalation but aims to recover hostages and ensure our borders are secure.”


Lebanon ministry says one dead in Israeli strike on south

Lebanon ministry says one dead in Israeli strike on south
Updated 52 min 54 sec ago
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Lebanon ministry says one dead in Israeli strike on south

Lebanon ministry says one dead in Israeli strike on south
  • The Israeli military said it carried out an air strike targeting two Hezbollah operatives

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s health ministry said at least one person was killed Sunday in an Israeli strike on the country’s south, as Israel said it hit Hezbollah operatives amid a fragile truce.
“The strike launched by the Israeli enemy in the town of Zibqin today led to a preliminary toll of one dead,” the health ministry said in a statement.
The Israeli military said it carried out an air strike targeting two Hezbollah operatives in the Zibqin area, adding in a statement that they were “attempting to rebuild Hezbollah terror infrastructure sites.”
A fragile ceasefire in late November largely halted more than a year of hostilities between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group, but Israel has continued to carry out strikes in Lebanon.
The latest raid came after visiting US deputy special envoy for the Middle East Morgan Ortagus discussed the situation in south Lebanon with senior officials on Saturday.
On Friday, Israel killed a commander of Palestinian militant group Hamas in a pre-dawn raid in the south Lebanese port city of Sidon that also killed his adult son and daughter.
A day earlier, Israel’s military said it carried out an air strike targeting a Hezbollah member in south Lebanon.
On Tuesday, Israel struck south Beirut, killing a Hezbollah Palestinian liaison officer, in only the second raid on the capital since the November 27 ceasefire.
The Lebanese health ministry reported four dead in that strike, including a woman.
Under the truce, Hezbollah was to redeploy its forces north of the Litani River, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the Israeli border, and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south.
Israel was to withdraw its forces across the UN-demarcated Blue Line, the de facto border, but has missed two deadlines to do so and continues to hold five positions it deems “strategic.”


Israel walks back its account of the killing of 15 medics in Gaza after video seems to contradict it

Israel walks back its account of the killing of 15 medics in Gaza after video seems to contradict it
Updated 10 min 29 sec ago
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Israel walks back its account of the killing of 15 medics in Gaza after video seems to contradict it

Israel walks back its account of the killing of 15 medics in Gaza after video seems to contradict it
  • Israeli military changes initial account of Gaza aid worker killings
  • Israeli military initially said soldiers opened fire on vehicles without lights and markings
  • UN and Red Cross demand independent inquiry into incident

UNITED NATIONS: The Israeli military backtracked on its account of the killing of 15 Palestinian medics by its forces last month after phone video appeared to contradict its claims that their vehicles did not have emergency signals on when troops opened fire on them in the Gaza Strip.
The military initially said it opened fire because the vehicles were “advancing suspiciously” on nearby troops without headlights or emergency signals. An Israeli military official, speaking late Saturday on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, said that account was “mistaken.”
The footage shows the Red Crescent and Civil Defense teams driving slowly with their emergency vehicles’ lights flashing, logos visible, as they pulled up to help an ambulance that had come under fire earlier. The teams do not appear to be acting unusually or in a threatening manner as three medics emerge and head toward the stricken ambulance.
Their vehicles immediately come under a barrage of gunfire, which goes on for more than five minutes with brief pauses. The owner of the phone can be heard praying.
“Forgive me, mother. This is the path I chose, mother, to help people,” he cries, his voice weak.
Eight Red Crescent personnel, six Civil Defense workers and a UN staffer were killed in the shooting before dawn on March 23 by Israeli troops conducting operations in Tel al-Sultan, a district of the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Troops then bulldozed over the bodies along with their mangled vehicles, burying them in a mass grave. UN and rescue workers were only able to reach the site a week later to dig out the bodies.
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society's vice president, Marwan Jilani, said the phone with the footage was found in the pocket of one of its slain staffers. The Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations distributed the video to the UN Security Council. The Associated Press obtained the video from a UN diplomat on condition of anonymity because it has not been made public.
One paramedic who survived, Munzer Abed, confirmed the veracity of the video to the AP. Two block-shaped concrete structures visible in the video are also seen in a UN video released Sunday showing the recovery of the bodies from the site — a sign they are in the same location.
Asked about the video, the Israeli military said Saturday that the incident was “under thorough examination.”
One medic remains missing
The head of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, Younes Al-Khatib, called for an independent investigation. “We don’t trust any of the army investigations,” he told a briefing at the UN on Friday.
One medic, Assaad al-Nassasra, is still missing, the Red Crescent says. Abed said he saw al-Nassasra being led away blindfolded by Israeli troops. Al-Khatib said the organization has asked the military where it is holding the staffer.
Al-Khatib said the slain men had been “targeted at close range” and that a forensic autopsy report would be released soon.
Israel has accused Hamas of moving and hiding its fighters inside ambulances and emergency vehicles, as well as in hospitals and other civilian infrastructure, arguing that justifies strikes on them. Medical personnel largely deny the accusations.
Israeli strikes have killed more than 150 emergency responders from the Red Crescent and Civil Defense, most of them while on duty, as well as over 1,000 health workers, according to the UN. The Israeli military rarely investigates such incidents.

Ambulances under a barrage of Israeli fire
Ambulances started heading to Tel al-Sultan at around 3:50 a.m. on March 23, responding to reports of wounded, Jilani said. The first ambulance returned safely with at least one casualty, he said. But, he said, subsequent ambulances came under fire.
His hands trembling, Abed told the AP on Saturday that as his ambulance entered the area, its siren lights were on. “All of a sudden, I am telling you, there was direct shooting at us,” so intense that the vehicle ground to a stop, he said.
A 10-year veteran of the Red Crescent, Abed said he was sitting in the back seat and ducked to the floor. He said he could hear nothing from his two colleagues in the front seat — the only others in the vehicle. They appear to have been killed instantly.
Israeli troops, some with night goggles, dragged Abed out of the ambulance and onto the ground, he said. They made him strip to his underwear, beat him all over his body with their rifle butts, then tied his hands behind his back, he said.
They interrogated him, asking him about his paramedic training and how many people were in the ambulance with him, he said. One soldier pressed the muzzle of his automatic rifle into his neck. Another pressed his knife blade into Abed’s palm, almost cutting it, until a third soldier pulled them away and warned Abed, “They’re crazy.”
Abed said he witnessed them opening fire on the next vehicles to arrive. Soldiers forced him onto his stomach and pressed a gun into his back, he said, and amid the shooting in the darkness, so he could only see two Civil Defense vehicles.
Video shows medic’s terror
The phone video shows a rescue convoy of Red Crescent and Civil Defense vehicles that was sent out after contact was lost with the stricken ambulance. Taken from the dashboard of one vehicle, it shows several ambulances and a fire truck moving down a road through a barren area in the darkness. The emergency lights on their roofs are flashing the entire way.
They arrive at an ambulance on the side of the road and stop next to it, their lights still flashing. No Israeli troops are visible.
“Lord, let them be OK,” a man in the car says. Then he cries out, “They’re tossed around on the ground!” — apparently referring to bodies. Three men in orange Civil Defense clothing can be seen getting out of the vehicles and walking toward the stopped ambulance.
A shot rings out and one of the men appears to fall. Gunfire erupts.
The man holding the phone appears to scramble out of the car and onto the ground, but the screen goes black, though the audio continues. The gunfire goes on for nearly five and a half minutes, with long, heavy barrages followed by silences punctuated by individual shots and shouts and screams.
Throughout, the man with the phone says over and over, “There is no God but God and Muhammad is God’s prophet” — the profession of faith that Muslims say when they fear they are about to die. Near the end of the six-minute, 40-second video, voices can be heard shouting in Hebrew. “The Jews are coming,” the man said, referring to Israeli soldiers, before the video cuts off.
The Israeli military official asserted there was “no mistreatment,” and said he didn’t know why the vehicles had been buried. He had no information about the medic who remained missing.

Israel claims they found militants afterward
The Israeli military says that after the shooting, troops determined they had killed a Hamas figure named Mohammed Amin Shobaki and eight other militants. However, none of the 15 slain medics has that name, and no other bodies are known to have been found at the site.
The military has not said what happened to Shobaki's body or released the names of the other alleged militants. The Israeli military official said Israel was “working to bring evidence” that Hamas operatives were killed.
Jonathan Whittall, interim head in Gaza of the UN humanitarian office OCHA, dismissed allegations that the slain medics were Hamas militants, saying staff had worked with the same medics previously in evacuating patients from hospitals and other tasks.
“These are paramedic crews that I personally have met before," he said. “They were buried in their uniforms with their gloves on. They were ready to save lives.”


Yemen’s Houthis say US airstrikes kill 2 as Trump’s bombing video suggests higher death toll

Yemen’s Houthis say US airstrikes kill 2 as Trump’s bombing video suggests higher death toll
Updated 06 April 2025
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Yemen’s Houthis say US airstrikes kill 2 as Trump’s bombing video suggests higher death toll

Yemen’s Houthis say US airstrikes kill 2 as Trump’s bombing video suggests higher death toll
  • Footage aired by the Houthis’ Al-Masirah satellite news channel showing a strike collapsing what appeared to be a two-story building
  • The Iranian-backed Houthis aired no footage from inside the building, which they described as a solar power shop

DUBAI: Suspected US airstrikes killed at least two people overnight in a stronghold of Yemen’s Houthi militants, the group said Sunday, as a bombing video posted by US President Donald Trump suggested casualties in the campaign may be higher than the militants acknowledge.
The strikes in Saada killed two people and wounded nine others, with footage aired by the Houthis’ Al-Masirah satellite news channel showing a strike collapsing what appeared to be a two-story building. The Iranian-backed Houthis aired no footage from inside the building, which they described as a solar power shop.
The intense campaign of airstrikes in Yemen under Trump targeting the militants over their attacks on shipping in Mideast waters stemming from the Israel-Hamas war has killed at least 69 people, according to casualty figures released by the Houthis.
However, the Houthis have not acknowledged any casualties from their security and military leadership — something challenged after an online video posted by Trump.
Trump bombing footage suggests rebel leaders targeted
Early Saturday, Trump posted what appeared to be black-and-white video from a drone of a group of several dozen people gathered in a circle. An explosion detonates during the 25-second video, with a massive crater left in its wake.
“These Houthis gathered for instructions on an attack,” Trump claimed, without offering a location for the attack or any other details about the strike. “Oops, there will be no attack by these Houthis! They will never sink our ships again!”
The US military’s Central Command, which oversees America’s Mideast military operations, has not published the video, nor offered any specific details about the strikes it has conducted since March 15. The White House has said there have been over 200 strikes so far targeting the Houthis.
The rebel-controlled SABA news agency in Yemen, citing an anonymous source, described the bombing as targeting “a social Eid visit in Hodeida governorate.” Muslims across the world just celebrated Eid Al-Fitr, the festival at the end of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. SABA had published images of other commanders meeting fighters during the holiday, though not any high-level Houthi officials.
“Those present at that gathering had no connection to the operations carried out by the (Houthis), which are implementing the decision to ban navigation on ships linked to the American and Israeli enemy,” the SABA report said, adding that the attack killed and wounded “dozens.”
However, the Houthis previously have not acknowledged any strike on Hodeida during that time with such a high casualty count. The SABA report also did not describe those killed as civilians, suggesting those killed had ties to the militants’ security or military forces.
Mohammed Al-Basha, a Yemen expert of the Basha Report risk advisory firm, cited social media condolence notices suggesting a colonel overseeing police stations for the Houthis in Hodeida had been killed in the strike Trump highlighted alongside his two brothers.
“The strikes have expanded significantly, hitting multiple goveronates simultaneously, alongside telecommunications infrastructure, command nodes, properties tied to senior Houthi leadership and previously untouched tunnel networks in mountainous areas,” Al-Basha told The Associated Press.
“We’ve also seen direct targeting of Houthi force gatherings, indicating a more aggressive and evolving shift in the targeting strategy,” Al-Basha said.
Intense US bombings began nearly a month ago
An AP review has found the new American operation against the Houthis under Trump appears more extensive than those under former US President Joe Biden, as Washington moves from solely targeting launch sites to firing at ranking personnel and dropping bombs on cities.
The new campaign of airstrikes started after the militants threatened to begin targeting “Israeli” ships again over Israel blocking aid entering the Gaza Strip. The militants have loosely defined what constitutes an Israeli ship, meaning many vessels could be targeted.
The Houthis targeted more than 100 merchant vessels with missiles and drones, sinking two of them and killing four sailors from November 2023 until January of this year. They also launched attacks targeting American warships without success.
The attacks greatly raised the profile of the Houthis, who faced economic problems and launched a crackdown targeting dissent and aid workers in Yemen amid a decadelong stalemated war that has torn apart the Arab world’s poorest nation.
The campaign shows no signs of stopping as the Trump administration repeatedly has linked its airstrikes on the Houthis to an effort to pressure Iran over its rapidly advancing nuclear program.


Palestinian teenager who died in Israeli prison showed signs of starvation, medical report says

Palestinian teenager who died in Israeli prison showed signs of starvation, medical report says
Updated 06 April 2025
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Palestinian teenager who died in Israeli prison showed signs of starvation, medical report says

Palestinian teenager who died in Israeli prison showed signs of starvation, medical report says
  • Starvation was likely the leading cause of death for a Palestinian teenager who died in an Israeli prison, according to an Israeli doctor who observed the autopsy
  • Ahmad, who was held for six months without being charged, is the youngest Palestinian prisoner to die in an Israeli prison since the start of the Gaza war

TEL AVIV: Starvation was likely the leading cause of death for a Palestinian teenager who died in an Israeli prison, according to an Israeli doctor who observed the autopsy.
Seventeen-year-old Walid Ahmad, who had been held for six months without being charged, suffered from extreme malnutrition, and also showed signs of inflammation of the colon and scabies, said a report written by Dr. Daniel Solomon, who watched the autopsy, conducted by Israeli experts, at the request of the boy’s family.
The Associated Press obtained a copy of Solomon’s report from the family. It did not conclude a cause of death, but said Ahmad was in a state of extreme weight loss and muscle wasting. It also noted that Ahmad had complained to the prison of inadequate food since at least December, citing reports from the prison medical clinic.
Ahmad died last month after collapsing in Megiddo Prison and striking his head, Palestinian officials said, citing eyewitness accounts from other prisoners. Israel’s prison service said a team was appointed to investigate Ahmad’s death and its findings would be sent to the authorized authorities.
Ahmad is the youngest Palestinian prisoner to die in an Israeli prison since the start of the Gaza war, according to Physicians for Human Rights Israel, which has documented Palestinian prisoner deaths. He was taken into custody from his home in the occupied West Bank during a pre-dawn raid in September for allegedly throwing stones at soldiers, his family said.
The autopsy was conducted on March 27 at Israel’s Abu Kabir Forensic Institute, which has not released a report of its findings and did not respond to requests for comment. The Ahmad family’s lawyer, Nadia Daqqa, confirmed Solomon, a gastrointestinal surgeon, was granted permission to observe the autopsy by an Israeli civil court.
Widespread abuse in Israeli prisons, rights groups say
Rights groups have documented widespread abuse in Israeli detention facilities holding thousands of Palestinians who were rounded up after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack ignited the war in the Gaza Strip. The Palestinian Authority says Israel is holding the bodies of 72 Palestinian prisoners who died in Israeli jails, including 61 who died since the beginning of the war. Israel often holds on to bodies of dead Palestinians, citing security grounds or for political leverage.
Conditions in Israeli prisons have worsened since the start of the war, former detainees have told the AP. They described beatings, severe overcrowding, insufficient medical care, scabies outbreaks and poor sanitary conditions.
Megiddo Prison, a maximum security facility where many Palestinian detainees, including teens, are held without charge, is regarded as one of the harshest, said Naji Abbas, head of the Prisoners and Detainees Department at Physicians for Human Rights Israel.
Israel’s prison service said it operates according to the law and all prisoners are given basic rights.
Ahmad’s lawyer, Firas Al-Jabrini, said Israeli authorities denied his requests to visit his client in prison, but three prisoners held there told him Ahmad suffered from severe diarrhea, vomiting, headaches and dizziness before he died. They suspected it was caused by dirty water, as well as cheese and yogurt prison guards brought in the morning and that sat out all day while detainees were fasting for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, the lawyer said.
Malnourished and frail
According to Dr. Solomon’s report the autopsy showed that Ahmed likely suffered from inflammation of the large intestine, a condition known as colitis that can cause frequent diarrhea and can in some cases contribute to death.
But medical experts said colitis usually doesn’t cause death in young patients and was likely exacerbated by severe malnutrition.
“He suffered from starvation that led to severe malnutrition and in combination with untreated colitis that caused dehydration and electrolyte levels disturbances in his blood which can cause heart rate abnormalities and death,” said Dr. Lina Qasem Hassan, the head of the board for Physicians for Human Rights Israel who reviewed the report at the request of the AP.
She said the findings indicated medical neglect, exacerbated by Ahmad’s inability to fight disease or infection because of how malnourished and frail he was.
Dr. Arne Stray-Pedersen, a professor of forensic medicine at the University of Oslo in Norway who was not involved in the autopsy, said the report suggests there was a period of prolonged malnutrition and sickness lasting at least a few weeks or months. “Based on the report, I interpret the underlying cause of death to be emaciation-wasting,” he said.
Scabies rashes were also noted on his legs and genital area, the report said. There was also air between his lungs that expanded into his neck and back, it said, which can cause infection. Air can come from small tears in the lungs, which can occur from severe vomiting or coughing, it said.
Ahmad’s family said he was a healthy high schooler who enjoyed playing soccer before he was taken into custody. His father, Khalid Ahmad, said his son sat through four brief court hearings by videoconference, and he noticed at one of them, in February, that his son appeared to be in poor health.
The family hasn’t yet received a death certificate from Israel, the elder Ahmad said Friday, and are hoping Dr. Solomon’s report will help bring his son’s body home.
“We will demand our son’s body for burial,” he said “What is happening in Israeli prisons is a real tragedy, as there is no value for life.”


Two British lawmakers detained by Israel are traveling home, minister says

British Foreign Minister David Lammy speaks during a press conference in Jerusalem on August 15, 2024. (AFP file photo)
British Foreign Minister David Lammy speaks during a press conference in Jerusalem on August 15, 2024. (AFP file photo)
Updated 06 April 2025
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Two British lawmakers detained by Israel are traveling home, minister says

British Foreign Minister David Lammy speaks during a press conference in Jerusalem on August 15, 2024. (AFP file photo)
  • “I have made clear to my counterparts in the Israeli government that this is no way to treat British Parliamentarians, and we have been in contact with both MPs tonight to offer our support,” Lammy said

LONDON: Two British members of parliament who were refused entry to Israel and briefly detained are traveling back to London, a British minister said on Sunday.
Yuan Yang and Abtisam Mohamed from Britain’s governing Labour Party visited as part of a parliamentary delegation and were barred because they were suspected of plans to “document the activities of security forces and spread anti-Israel hatred,” Sky News reported, citing the Israeli immigration ministry.
“They are on their way home now,” Britain’s deputy finance minister Darren Jones told BBC television.
“The way that my colleagues have been treated is unacceptable, as the foreign secretary has said.”
Both MPs had flown to Israel from Luton on Saturday, Sky News said.
“I have made clear to my counterparts in the Israeli government that this is no way to treat British Parliamentarians, and we have been in contact with both MPs tonight to offer our support,” Foreign Secretary David Lammy said in a statement released late on Saturday.
“The UK government’s focus remains securing a return to the ceasefire and negotiations to stop the bloodshed, free the hostages and end the conflict in Gaza,” he added.
Israel’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.