| FurnaceOfMonkl/Arab Media User:FurnaceOfMonkl/Arab_Media
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| Targeting of civilian areas in the 2006 Lebanon War Artillery and missiles fired into civilian areas in Lebanon and Israel by both the Israel Defence Forces and Hezbollah were a major component of the 2006 Lebanon war. Intended targeting aside, approximately one-quarter of the Israelis killed by Hezbollah and the vast majority of the Lebanese killed by Israeli forces were widely reported to be civilians. Targeting_of_civilian_areas_in_the_2006_Lebanon_War
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| Ceasefire attempts during the 2006 Lebanon War The ceasefire attempts during the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict started immediately, with Lebanon calling for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire already the day after the start of the hostilities. Israel, however, strongly backed by the United States and the United Kingdom, insisted that there could be no ceasefire until Hezbollah's militia had been disarmed or removed from southern Lebanon. Ceasefire_attempts_during_the_2006_Lebanon_War
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| Position of Lebanon in the 2006 Lebanon War Lebanon's position in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict has from the start been to disavow the Hezbollah shelling and raid on 12 July, while calling for an immediate ceasefire and the withdrawal of all Israeli forces from Lebanese territory.On 13 July, after an emergency meeting of the Lebanese government, Prime Minister Fouad Siniora stated that the government had not been aware of Hezbollah's raid before it happened "and does not take responsibility for, nor endorses what happened on the international border" . Position_of_Lebanon_in_the_2006_Lebanon_War
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| Qana airstrike 2006 Qana airstrike was an attack by the Israel Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building in the small community of al-Khuraybah near the South Lebanese village of Qana on July 30, 2006, during the 2006 Lebanon War in which 28 civilians were killed, about half being children. Israel halted airstrikes for 48 hours following the attack, amid increasing calls for a cease-fire in the conflict between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrillas. Qana_airstrike
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| Qana airstrike Talk:Qana_airstrike
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| History of Hezbollah History_of_Hezbollah
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| Muhammad Fneish Muhammad Fneish () is a Lebanese politician and member of Hezbollah. As of 2008, he is the Minister of Labour.He was one of Hezbollah's two representatives in the government of Prime Minister of Lebanon Fouad Siniora until Hezbollah left the government in 2006. Muhammad_Fneish
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| Casualties of the 2006 Lebanon War casualties in the 2006 Lebanon War, leading to condemnation of both sides, however the exact distribution of casualties has been disputed. The Lebanese Higher Relief Council (HRC), UNICEF, Casualties_of_the_2006_Lebanon_War
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| Lebanon/Archive 1 Talk:Lebanon/Archive_1
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| Hezbollah/Archive 2 Talk:Hezbollah/Archive_2
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| Hopiakuta/ ¡¿ lebanon User:Hopiakuta/_¡¿_lebanon
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| Al-Qaa airstrike 2006 Qaa airstrike was an attack by the Israel Air Force (IAF) on a building in the area of al-Qaa around 10 kilometers (six miles) from Hermel in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon on 4 August 2006. The attack took place during the 2006 Lebanon War. Thirty-three farm workers, mostly Syrian and Lebanese Kurds, were killed during the airstrike. Al-Qaa_airstrike
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| 2006 Lebanon War 2006_Lebanon_War
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| Siniora Plan Siniora Plan was the unofficial name of the 7-point truce plan for the 2006 Lebanon War (the July War) that was presented by Lebanon's Prime Minister Fuad Siniora at the 15-nation conference in Rome on 27 July 2006.The Siniora Plan called for a mutual release of Lebanese and Israeli prisoners and detainees, an immediate withdrawal of the Israeli ground troops behind the Blue Line, that the disputed Shebaa Farms area would be placed under UN jurisdiction until the ownership issue had been settled, that Israel handed over all remaining maps showing their landmines in southern Lebanon, that the Lebanese army took full control over southern Lebanon, and that a strong multi-national force under the UN is given the necessary powers (including operating under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, which allows Siniora_Plan
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| Chyah airstrike Chyah Airstrike or the Chyah massacre was an attack by the Israel Air Force (IAF) on the Shiyyah suburb in the Lebanese capital of Beirut on August 7, 2006, during the 2006 Lebanon War. Two missiles fired from an IDF bomber destroyed three apartment buildings in the suburb. The death toll from the airstrikes has risen as recovery efforts have continued, with 50 corpses recovered so far and 61 anticipated. Chyah_airstrike
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| Ghaziyeh airstrikes 2006 Ghaziyeh airstrikes were two sequential attacks by the Israel Air Force (IAF) on the city of Ghaziyeh in Lebanon on August 7, and August 8 2006. The attacks took place during the 2006 Lebanon War. In the first attack on August 7, the IAF bombed a building killing 15. In the second attack on August 8, the IAF fired five missiles into three buildings killing a total of 14 civilians and wounding 23. A total of twenty-nine civilians died in the attacks. Ghaziyeh_airstrikes
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| Ghajar For the village in Azerbaijan, see Qacar.Ghajar (or al-Ghajar) is an Alawite village on the Hasbani River on the border between Lebanon and the Israeli-controlled area of the Golan Heights. It has a population of 2,000. Ghajar
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| Salam Daher Salam Daher (born 1967/6 is a Lebanese civil defense worker who was the target of accusations by bloggers in the aftermath of the Israeli airstrike on Qana on July 30, 2006, where widely-published photographs showed him removing dead children from the rubble of a house struck by an Israeli attack. Salam_Daher
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| 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict/Archive 21 Talk:2006_Israel-Lebanon_conflict/Archive_21
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