Chancellor Merz calls for end to fighting in south Lebanon

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanjahu in a phone call to end the fighting in south Lebanon. He encouraged direct peace talks with the Lebanese government and called on Hezbollah to lay down its arms. Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul welcomed upcoming talks between Israel and Lebanon.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) called in a phone conversation with Benjamin Netanjahu for an end to the fighting in south Lebanon. Merz advocated "to end the combat operations in the south of Lebanon," government spokesman Stefan Kornelius said. Hezbollah must lay down its weapons, and Netanjahu should engage in direct peace talks with the Lebanese government.

Merz also expressed great concern about developments in the Palestinian territories. There must be no de facto partial annexation of the West Bank, home to around three million Palestinians and more than 500,000 Israeli settlers in settlements illegal under international law.

Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul (CDU) welcomed Tuesday's planned ambassador-level talks in Washington between Israel and Lebanon, following a call with his Lebanese counterpart Jussef Raggi. They could be "an important first step into a future in which both are respected: Israel's legitimate security interests and Lebanon's right to territorial integrity and sovereignty," he said. Hezbollah attacks on Israel must stop, and the Israeli army must protect civilians and infrastructure.

Germany provided an additional 45 million euros in humanitarian aid for displaced people in Lebanon. The Lebanese presidency seeks to negotiate a ceasefire with Hezbollah, while Israel demands its disarmament.

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President Trump with Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors shaking hands in the Oval Office after ceasefire extension agreement.
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Israel and Lebanon extend ceasefire by three weeks after White House ambassador talks: Trump

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One week after an initial 10-day Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire took effect amid violations, U.S. President Donald Trump announced that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to extend it by three weeks. The deal followed Thursday's second round of U.S.-facilitated talks between the countries' ambassadors to Washington in the Oval Office.

French President Emmanuel Macron urged his US counterpart Donald Trump and Iranian President Massoud Pezeshkian on Wednesday to extend the recently agreed ceasefire with Iran to Lebanon. He described this extension as a necessary condition for a credible and durable agreement. The calls come after Israeli strikes on Beirut that killed at least 182 people and injured 890, according to Lebanon's health ministry.

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Federal Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier are hosting Syria’s interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa in Berlin on his first visit to Germany. The talks focus on repatriation of Syrian refugees and reconstruction of the civil war-torn country. Protests are planned in Berlin at the same time.

Chancellor Friedrich Merz faced interruptions and skepticism from union delegates at the DGB congress in Berlin. Speaking before about 400 attendees, he defended his reform agenda while DGB chair Yasmin Fahimi warned against rolling back labor rights.

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Angela Merkel called for stronger diplomatic efforts by European states in the Ukraine war during a conference. She also voiced support for military aid to Ukraine.

Egypt has launched an intensive diplomatic offensive to prevent the Middle East from descending into 'total chaos,' promoting US-Iran dialogue as the 'only way' to ensure regional stability. Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty held high-level telephone consultations on Monday and Tuesday with counterparts from several countries and a US envoy. The discussions focused on containing the current military escalation.

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The spokesperson for the French Foreign Ministry described Israeli strikes in Lebanon on Wednesday as «disproportionate». Pascal Confavreux said France could not rule out reopening talks on suspending the EU-Israel association agreement. This stance follows recent events in Lebanon and the West Bank.

 

 

 

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