France’s Macron urges Israel to avoid escalation, ‘particularly in Lebanon’

French President Emmanuel Macron called on Israel to avoid escalation, “particularly in Lebanon,” following a strike in Beirut attributed to Israel that killed Hamas’s deputy leader, the Elysee Palace said Tuesday.

Macron, who spoke by telephone with Israeli minister and war cabinet member Benny Gantz, said “it was essential to avoid any escalatory attitude, particularly in Lebanon, and that France would continue to pass on these messages to all players directly or indirectly involved in the area,” the presidency said.

Hamas number two Saleh al-Arouri was killed in a strike attributed to Israel in a suburb of Beirut on Tuesday evening, the Palestinian militant group and Lebanese security officials said.

Israel regularly carries out strikes against the Hamas-allied Hezbollah movement along its shared border with Lebanon, but Al-Arouri’s killing was the first time since the start of the war in Gaza that it has targeted the Lebanese capital.

After the strike, Hezbollah vowed Al-Arouri’s death would not go “unpunished,” calling it “a serious assault on Lebanon… and a dangerous development in the course of the war.”

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati also condemned the killing and said it “aims to draw Lebanon” further into the Israel-Hamas war.

In his conversation with Gantz, Macron reiterated his call for a “lasting ceasefire” between Israel and Hamas, the presidency said.

He also expressed again his “deepest concern” at the mounting civilian death toll in Gaza, as well as the humanitarian crisis unfolding inside the Palestinian territory, while at the same time reaffirming “France’s commitment to the security of Israel”.

The war in Gaza was triggered by Hamas’s bloody attack on October 7, which resulted in the death of around 1,140 people in Israel, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

After the attack, Israel launched a relentless bombardment and ground offensive against the group that has killed at least 22,185 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s health ministry.

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