International
Israeli air strikes kill 492 people in Lebanon
Israeli air strikes kill 492 people in Lebanon
At least 492 people have been killed in intense and wide-ranging Israeli air strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon, the country’s health ministry says, in the deadliest day of conflict there in almost 20 years.
Thousands of families have also fled their homes as the Israeli military said it hit 1,600 Hezbollah targets in an operation to destroy infrastructure that the armed group had built up since the 2006 war.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, launched more than 200 rockets into northern Israel, according to the military. Paramedics said two people were injured by shrapnel.
World powers have been urging restraint as both sides appear to be spiralling closer towards all-out war.
Lebanon’s health ministry said 35 children and 58 women were among the dead, while 1,645 others had been wounded.
It did not report how many of the casualties were civilians or combatants.
Health Minister Firass Abiad said thousands of families had also been displaced by the strikes.
UN Secretary General António Guterres expressed alarm at the escalating situation and said he did not want Lebanon to “become another Gaza”.
EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell said the “escalation is extremely dangerous and worrying” ahead of a gathering of world leaders at the UN in New York, adding “we are almost in a full-fledged war”.
President Joe Biden said the US was “working to de-escalate in a way that allows people to return home safely”, while the Pentagon announced it was sending “a small number” of additional troops to the Middle East “out of an abundance of caution”.
Nearly a year of cross-border fighting between Israel and Hezbollah sparked by the war in Gaza has killed hundreds of people, most of them Hezbollah fighters, and displaced tens of thousands on both sides of the frontier.
READ ALSO:
- Yahaya Bello: Kogi assembly demands removal of EFCC chairman, says he’s incompetent
- Troops eliminate terrorists, rescue hostages in major operations
- LASTMA cracks down on BRT Lane offenders, seizes 488 vehicles
Hezbollah has said it is acting in support of Hamas and will not stop until there is a ceasefire in Gaza. Both groups are backed by Iran and proscribed as terrorist organisations by Israel, the UK and other countries.
The Pentagon said it was sending “a small number” of additional US troops to the Middle East amid the growing crisis.
“In light of increased tension in the Middle East and out of an abundance of caution, we are sending a small number of additional US military personnel forward to augment our forces that are already in the region,” said Pentagon spokesman Maj Gen Pat Ryder in a briefing with reporters.
He would not answer any follow-up questions on the specifics.
Early on Tuesday, the IDF said it had detected 20 launches from Lebanon overnight “in the valleys area”, adding some were intercepted by air defense fighters and others fell in open areas.
“Air Force aircraft attacked the sources of the fire,” it added on X.
Lebanese media said the first wave of Israeli air strikes began at around 06:30 local time (03:30 GMT) on Monday.
“It was horrifying, the missiles flew over our heads. We woke up to the sound of bombings, we didn’t expect this,” one woman said.
Dozens of towns, villages and open areas were targeted throughout the day in the districts of Sidon, Marjayoun, Nabatieh, Bint Jbeil, Tyre, Jezzine and Zahrani in southern Lebanon, as well as the Zahle, Baalbek and Hermel districts in the eastern Bekaa Valley, according to the state-run National News Agency (NNA).
In the evening, it reported that a building in the Bir al-Abed area of the southern suburbs of the capital, Beirut, was hit by several missiles.
Lebanese security sources said the strike targeted Hezbollah’s top commander in southern Lebanon, Ali Karaki, but that it was not clear whether he was killed. Hezbollah’s media office said Karaki was “fine” and had “moved to a safe place”.
From the south to Beirut, roads were congested as people desperately tried to leave amid the bombardment and after receiving audio and text messages from the Israeli military warning them to move away immediately from buildings where Hezbollah was storing weapons.
A family of four riding on a motorbike spoke to the BBC in Beirut during a brief stop on their way to the northern city of Tripoli. “What do you want us to say? We just had to flee,” the father said anxiously.
Information Minister Ziad Makary said his ministry had received an Israeli phone call urging it to evacuate its building in Beirut. However, he insisted that it would not comply with what he called “a psychological war”.
READ ALSO:
- APC sweeps Sokoto LG polls
- CFAO Nigeria unveils CNG-powered King Long bus for sustainable transportation
- Edo victory sign of people’s support for our economic programme – Tinubu
Prime Minister Najib Mikati, meanwhile, told a cabinet meeting: “The continued Israeli aggression on Lebanon is a war of extermination in every sense of the word.”
“We are working as a government to stop this new Israeli war and to avoid descending into the unknown,” he added.
On Monday night Israel said it killed a “large number” of Hezbollah militants when it hit about 1,600 sites in southern and eastern Lebanon.
“Essentially, we are targeting combat infrastructure that Hezbollah has been building for the past 20 years. This is very significant,” the IDF’s Chief of Staff, Lt Gen Herzi Halevi, told commanders in Tel Aviv.
“Ultimately, everything is focused on creating the conditions to return the residents of the north to their homes.”
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman Rear Adm Daniel Hagari said videos from southern Lebanon showed “significant secondary explosions caused by Hezbollah’s weapons that were being stored inside the buildings”.
“It is likely that some of the casualties are from these secondary explosions,” he added.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged the people of Lebanon to “get out of harm’s way now”.
“For too long, Hezbollah has been using you as human shields. It placed rockets in your living rooms and missiles in your garage,” he said. “To defend our people against Hezbollah strikes, we must take out these weapons.”
A senior Israeli military official insisted that the IDF was “currently focusing on Israel’s aerial campaign only” after being asked by reporters if a ground invasion of southern Lebanon was imminent to create a buffer zone.
The official said Israel had three aims – to degrade Hezbollah’s ability to fire rockets and missiles over the Lebanon-Israel border, to push its fighters back from the frontier, and to destroy the infrastructure built by Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force which could be used to attack Israeli communities.
Hezbollah did not comment on the Israeli claims that it had hidden weapons in houses, and its media office had announced the death of only one fighter by Monday evening.
But in a sign that it is unlikely to back down, it said it had responded to the “Israeli enemy’s attacks” by firing barrages of rockets at several Israeli military bases in northern Israel, as well as a weapons manufacturing facility in the coastal Zvulun area, north of the city of Haifa.
The IDF said 210 projectiles had crossed from Lebanon by the evening, and that an unspecified number had landed in the Lower Galilee and Upper Galilee regions, in Haifa and the nearby areas of Carmel, HaAmakim and Hamifratz areas, and in the occupied Golan Heights.
One house was badly damaged by a rocket in Givat Avni, in the Lower Galilee.
Resident David Yitzhak told the BBC that he, his wife and six-year-old daughter were unharmed because they had managed to get behind the solid door of the house’s safe room seconds earlier, when a warning siren sounded.
“It’s a metre from life to death,” he said.
Israel’s ambulance service said it treated two people with shrapnel wounds in the Lower and Upper Galilee regions, and that another person was injured as they rushed to a shelter.
Early on Tuesday, the IDF said it had detected 20 launches from Lebanon overnight “in the valleys area”, adding some were intercepted by air defense fighters and others fell in open areas.
“Air Force aircraft attacked the sources of the fire,” it added on X.
On Sunday, Hezbollah launched more than 150 rockets and drones across the border, while Israeli jets struck hundreds of targets across southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah remains a powerful force, despite being weakened by what Israel’s defence minister described as “the most difficult week” for the group since its establishment.
On Tuesday and Wednesday, 39 people were killed and thousands were wounded after thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah exploded. And on Friday, Hezbollah said at least 16 members, including top commanders of its elite Radwan Force, were among 45 people killed in an Israeli air strike in southern Beirut.
Speaking at a funeral on Sunday, Hezbollah’s deputy leader Naim Qassem said the group would not be deterred.
“We have entered a new phase,” he said, “the title of which is the open-ended battle of reckoning.”
On the streets of Beirut, one young man told the BBC that he was “very scared of the war escalating” because it would “ cause a lot of disaster, it will stop students going to university”.
But another man was defiant, saying: “We’re not scared, we have to stand tall, we have to defend ourselves.”
Israeli air strikes kill 492 people in Lebanon
BBC
![]()
International
US Intercepts Iranian Missiles, Drones Targeting Kuwait, Bahrain
US Intercepts Iranian Missiles, Drones Targeting Kuwait, Bahrain
The United States military says it has intercepted multiple Iranian missiles and drones allegedly launched toward Kuwait and Bahrain, marking a major escalation in already fragile tensions across the Gulf region despite ongoing ceasefire efforts.
The development was disclosed by the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), which stated that Iran fired seven ballistic missiles toward the two Gulf nations shortly after earlier drone attacks were directed at maritime routes near the strategic Strait of Hormuz.
CENTCOM said six of the missiles were successfully intercepted, while the seventh did not reach its intended target. The command added that there were no reports of casualties among U.S. personnel or allied forces in the region. It also dismissed Iranian media claims alleging damage to the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, describing them as false.
Before the missile strikes, U.S. forces reportedly intercepted and destroyed four Iranian one-way attack drones heading toward the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global energy shipping corridor. According to CENTCOM, the drones posed an “immediate threat to regional maritime traffic,” raising concerns over the safety of commercial vessels navigating one of the world’s most sensitive waterways. The Strait of Hormuz remains a critical route for global oil exports, with a significant portion of the world’s petroleum supply passing through it daily.
In response to the aerial and missile activity, U.S. forces carried out targeted strikes on Iranian coastal surveillance infrastructure, including radar installations in Goruk and on Qeshm Island. CENTCOM said the strikes were conducted to “defend against further maritime attacks and restore deterrence,” adding that the facilities were being used to monitor naval movement in the Gulf. Military analysts say the exchange represents one of the most serious direct military confrontations between U.S. and Iranian forces in recent months.
READ ALSO:
- Nigerian Priest Sentenced to Life in Prison for Sexually Assaulting Women in Texas
- Bandits Collect N3m, Smartphone, Clothes Before Announcing Zamfara Teacher’s Death
- How Online Pharmaceutical Ads Endanger Lives, Fuel Self-Medication
Iran has strongly denied responsibility for the attacks and condemned the U.S. response, accusing Washington of escalating the crisis and violating international law. Tehran claimed that U.S. operations targeted an Iranian oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz and a telecommunications tower on Qeshm Island, alleging that the strikes were launched from regional partners in Kuwait and Bahrain. Iran further warned that any country assisting U.S. military operations could be considered complicit in acts of aggression, raising diplomatic tensions across the Gulf.
The latest exchange comes amid a fragile ceasefire arrangement between Washington and Tehran, which has faced repeated accusations of violations from both sides. Security experts describe the situation as a “low-intensity conflict,” with intermittent drone activity, missile launches and cyber incidents continuing despite diplomatic engagement efforts. The escalating Iran–US tensions have raised fears of a broader regional confrontation involving Gulf allies and critical maritime trade routes.
Alongside military action, the United States announced new sanctions targeting Iran’s oil smuggling and financial networks. Washington said it is dismantling a “sophisticated network” accused of moving hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of Iranian liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to Asia through front companies based in the United Arab Emirates and China. The U.S. Treasury Department said Iran’s “shadow fleet” of tankers has been used to disguise oil exports and bypass international sanctions. Additional sanctions were imposed on Iranian currency exchange operators accused of facilitating illicit financial transactions linked to oil revenues.
Despite rising tensions, diplomatic efforts over Iran’s nuclear programme are still ongoing, though progress remains limited. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General, Rafael Grossi, said discussions are continuing toward a possible preliminary framework agreement but warned that significant technical and political hurdles remain. A key challenge remains restoring full inspection access to Iranian nuclear sites and clarifying the status of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump also commented on the situation, saying he rejected proposals to deploy American troops into Iran to recover enriched uranium. He warned that any Iranian attack resulting in the deaths of American troops would justify a return to military action, while also signalling openness to future diplomatic engagement with Tehran.
Security analysts warn that continued missile and drone exchanges near the Strait of Hormuz could destabilise global energy markets and maritime security. The Gulf region remains one of the most strategically important areas in the world for oil exports, and any escalation could lead to disruptions in shipping, insurance costs and global oil prices. Experts say the combination of military confrontation, sanctions pressure and stalled nuclear talks leaves the region in a highly volatile and unpredictable state.
US Intercepts Iranian Missiles, Drones Targeting Kuwait, Bahrain
![]()
International
Nigerian Priest Sentenced to Life in Prison for Sexually Assaulting Women in Texas
Nigerian Priest Sentenced to Life in Prison for Sexually Assaulting Women in Texas
WACO, Texas – A Nigerian-born Catholic priest has been sentenced to life in prison after a Texas jury convicted him of repeatedly sexually assaulting female parishioners who sought his spiritual guidance. Father Anthony Odiong, 57, who served in the United States for nearly 17 years, was found guilty of first-degree sexual assault and two counts of second-degree sexual assault following a four-day trial in Waco’s 19th State District Court. The jury handed down the life sentence on Tuesday, along with two concurrent 20-year terms and $30,000 in fines.
The severity of the sentence reflects the legal framework in Texas, where it is a felony for clergy members to engage in sexual relationships with adults under their spiritual care. The law recognizes that individuals seeking pastoral guidance cannot legally consent due to the inherent power imbalance. Prosecutors successfully proved that Odiong exploited this trust for more than a decade, using his role as a priest to groom, manipulate, and sexually assault vulnerable women who came to him for help. “He used the collar as a weapon,” one prosecutor told the jury during closing arguments.
The trial brought forward harrowing testimony from multiple women. One survivor, a mother of nine identified as “Mary Doe,” testified that Odiong began a sexual relationship with her in 2008 after she sought his counsel following an abusive marriage. She said he told her the relationship was “holy and special.” Her son testified that he walked in on Odiong and his mother when he was just 14 years old. In a separate case, DNA evidence presented by prosecutors confirmed that Odiong fathered a child with another woman under his spiritual direction in Louisiana, with a certainty of greater than 99.99 percent. Nearly a dozen women have publicly accused Odiong of sexual misconduct spanning more than a decade.
READ ALSO:
- Bandits Collect N3m, Smartphone, Clothes Before Announcing Zamfara Teacher’s Death
- How Online Pharmaceutical Ads Endanger Lives, Fuel Self-Medication
- Don’t add lies to the terrorist horror in Oyo, By Farooq Kperogi
Odiong will not be eligible for parole until he has served at least 30 years of his life sentence. His defense attorney, Gerald Villarial, said he will file an appeal against both the conviction and the sentence. “We believe there were legal errors that affected the outcome,” Villarial told reporters after the sentencing.
The Catholic Church has responded publicly to the verdict. Bishop Daniel E. Garcia of the Diocese of Austin issued a statement assuring parishioners that the sacraments administered by Odiong remain valid, explaining that “the validity of the Sacrament depends on Christ… not on the moral status of the minister.” However, Bishop Garcia acknowledged that while the diocese had received some allegations of misconduct before Odiong left Waco, “the information known to us at the time did not indicate the level of criminality revealed in court testimony.” The Archdiocese of New Orleans, where Odiong later served as pastor of a church in Luling, Louisiana, called his actions “reprehensible” and confirmed he was removed from his pastoral role in 2023.
Odiong was originally ordained in the Diocese of Uyo, Nigeria. He began ministering in Waco, Texas in 2006 before relocating to Louisiana. At the time of his arrest in Florida in 2024, authorities also alleged they found child pornography in his possession, though that charge was not part of the Texas trial.
For readers seeking a quick summary of the case, the key details are as follows. Father Anthony Odiong, age 57, is a Nigerian priest from the Diocese of Uyo. He was sentenced to life imprisonment in Waco, Texas, with parole eligibility only after 30 years. He was also fined $30,000. His convictions include one count of first-degree sexual assault and two counts of second-degree sexual assault. The trial took place in the 19th State District Court in Waco. Key evidence included DNA proof that he fathered a child with a parishioner and emotional testimony from multiple survivors. His defense attorney has filed an appeal.
Nigerian Priest Sentenced to Life in Prison for Sexually Assaulting Women in Texas
![]()
International
UK Tightens Immigration Rules, Threatens Universities Over Foreign Student Recruitment
UK Tightens Immigration Rules, Threatens Universities Over Foreign Student Recruitment
The United Kingdom has introduced tougher immigration measures that could restrict universities from recruiting international students if they fail to meet stricter compliance requirements under a revised visa monitoring system.
The new rules, announced by the UK Home Office, form part of broader efforts to reduce rising asylum claims linked to study, work and tourist visas, with foreign students identified as the largest group associated with such applications in recent data.
Under the updated framework, universities risk losing their student sponsor licence if more than 5 per cent of visa applications linked to their institution are refused, compared to the previous threshold of 10 per cent.
The Home Office said it will now use enhanced monitoring systems to track both visa refusal rates and the performance of individual institutions, allowing authorities to identify universities that fail to properly vet or support applicants.
Officials also warned that institutions could face sanctions if large numbers of international students either fail to enrol after securing visas or fail to complete their academic programmes.
In addition, the government has raised compliance benchmarks for universities recruiting foreign students. The required enrolment rate has been increased to 95 per cent, up from 90 per cent, while the course completion rate threshold has risen from 85 per cent to 90 per cent.
READ ALSO:
- He forced himself on me every night: Anambra Teenager Gang-Raped by Guardian, Seven Others
- Emir of Argungu Urges Communities to Legally Acquire Weapons for Self-Defence
- FCT Police Begin Enforcement of Tinted Glass Ban, Seize Over 30 Vehicles
According to the Home Office, poor enrolment or high dropout rates may indicate abuse of the student visa route, including cases where applicants use study visas as a pathway to seek work or remain in the UK irregularly.
The government also linked the tightening measures to concerns about abuse of the immigration system, saying it is working to ensure that the student visa route is used strictly for genuine education purposes.
The reforms follow a series of earlier restrictions, including an “emergency brake” introduced on study visas for nationals of countries such as Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan, after officials reported increased asylum applications from some student visa holders.
UK authorities said asylum claims from individuals on student visas have fallen significantly following recent enforcement actions, which include stricter scrutiny of visa applications and compliance checks.
The Home Office also confirmed that it has contacted more than 300,000 international students whose visas are nearing expiry, warning them against submitting unfounded asylum claims and urging those without legal status to either regularise their stay or leave the country.
The latest policy shift is expected to increase pressure on UK universities, many of which depend heavily on international student tuition fees to support funding, research and institutional budgets.
Education stakeholders have previously warned that tighter immigration controls could affect the UK’s attractiveness as a destination for global students, particularly as countries such as Canada and Australia continue to expand international student pathways.
The UK government has not yet confirmed full implementation timelines, but said consultations and enforcement planning are ongoing across education and immigration agencies.
UK Tightens Immigration Rules, Threatens Universities Over Foreign Student Recruitment
![]()
-
metro1 day agoSharia Demand for Oyo Abductees’ Release: Kidnappers Do Not Speak for Islam — Muslim Community
-
metro2 days agoSchoolchildren Abductions: Pastor Ibiyeomie Drops Bombshell, Names Sponsors
-
News1 day agoEkiti LG Vice Chairman Remanded Over Alleged Self-Kidnapping
-
News1 day agoPresidency announces arrest of suspect linked to fake Tinubu audio fraud
-
metro3 days agoJilted Groom Sues Ex-Fiancée’s Father for Dowry Refund
-
metro1 day agoKidnapping in South-West Is a Business, Not a Religious War — Ex-Minister Olanrewaju
-
News1 day agoTinubu Approves One-Year Salary Gratuity for Retiring Federal Workers
-
metro22 hours ago49 Die of Thirst in Niger’s Sahara Desert After Truck Breakdown
