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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Hezbollah fighters injured in Lebanon when their new pagers all simultaneously explode

 Paging all terrorists!

Thousands of Hezbollah terrorists were injured in southern Lebanon on Tuesday when their new pagers all simultaneously exploded — causing horrifying wounds to their groins and hands as the devices detonated on their belts and in their pockets. 

Lebanese officials said 2,800 people were injured and nine killed in what Hezbollah officials claimed was an attack by Israel. 

Hundreds of Hezbollah fighters were seriously wounded on Tuesday when the pagers they used to communicate exploded on their belts and in their pockets.
The pagers were left mangled after the sabotage.
A police officer inspects a car damaged by an exploding pager in Beirut on Sept. 17, 2024.AP Photo/Hussein Malla
The blood of an injured man on his car door after a pager explosion in Beirut.AP Photo/Hussein Malla

Hezbollah — a Lebanese militant group that the US has designated as a terrorist organization — confirmed the wide-ranging attack on its operatives, including fighters and medics. One official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, called it the “biggest security breach” since the group began its near-daily attacks on Israel on Oct. 8. 

The devices that detonated were all the latest models acquired by Hezbollah in recent months. They were distributed to members after Hezbollah’s leader warned his fighters not to carry cell phones — telling them they could be used to track their movements or carry out targeted strikes. 

Hezbollah members rushed to hospital after pagers exploded
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The Israeli spy agency Mossad allegedly intercepted the shipment five months ago and rigged them with pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN), a highly explosive material, sources told Sky News Arabia, according to a translation from Israeli media.

The explosive material was allegedly placed inside the pagers’ batteries and  detonated by an external command that caused the batteries’ temperatures to overheat and trigger the explosion, the sources added. 

First responders carry a man injured by an exploding pager in Sidon, Lebanon.AP
A man on a motorcycle injured by one of the explosive devices.@Osint613

Videos uploaded to social media show several incidents in which seemingly unaware men had devices in their pockets blow up, with the victims crying in pain as bystanders ran away. 

One such video shows a man shopping at a local grocery store when an explosion occurs in his pocket, sending debris flying out of his pants as he falls to the floor. 

Other videos circulating on social media show dozens of men in hospitals covered in burn wounds, with one man with his fingers blown off and another covering his bloody face.      

A civil defense first responder carries a wounded man at al-Zahraa hospital in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sept. 17.AP
Lebanese soldiers block an entrance of a Beirut suburb on September 17, 2024, after explosions hit locations in several Hezbollah strongholds.AFP via Getty Images
A man receiving medical attention after getting injured by an explosion.@Osint613

Several of the men caught by the blasts could be seen covering their groins and thighs, which were likely wounded when the pagers went off in their pants. 

Doctors could also be seen treating the injured men lying on cardboard mats in the hallway as the hospitals were quickly inundated Tuesday morning.  

Israel has not commented on the attack, and US said it had no advance knowledge of any operation against Hezbollah. 

Wild, international operations allegedly carried out by Israel against Iran and its proxies:

  • On July 31st, 2024, Iran accused Israel of planting a bomb inside the Tehran facility housing former Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh, who died when it was detonated.
  • In December 2020, Israel allegedly used a satellite-controlled machine gun equipped with “artificial intelligence” to kill Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who founded Iran’s nuclear program.
  • In 2010, Massaoud Ali-Mohammadi and Majid Shahriari, two nuclear scientists in Tehran, were blown up by a remotely detonated bomb hooked up to a motorcycle.  
  • That same year, the Stuxnet cyberweapon devastated Iran’s nuclear program, with reports later confirming it was deployed in a joint effort by the US and Israel.
  • In 1997, Hamas’ Khaled Meshaal was poisoned by Israeli agents in a botched operation that saw the terrorist receive the antidote in a move made to prevent the king of Jordan from walking away from a historic peace treaty.
Lebanese soldiers and Hezbollah members gather outside a hospital where injured people were being transported following the explosions.WAEL HAMZEH/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

The attack will have a significant impact on Hezbollah’s military effectiveness, Seth J. Frantzman at The Foundation for Defense of Democracies told The Post. The group is believed to have about 40,000 fighters. 

“Hezbollah invests a great deal in its recruits and its members and views them as an elite force,” he said. “Thousands of members injured by exploding pagers will be a serious setback for Hezbollah on multiple levels.”

One Hezbollah official told the Wall Street Journal that some members felt their pagers heat up and disposed of them before they detonated.  

Residents said the explosions continued to occur even 30 minutes after the initial blast. ANONYMOUS/AFP via Getty Images

Officials said at least 14 people were also wounded in Syria, with Navvar Saban, a security and conflict analyst at the Omran Center for Strategic Studies, saying those injured in Syria were members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in Syria.

“It’s thousands of assassination attempts at the same time that happened in different geographical areas,” Saba told Al Jazeera. “The psychological impact is huge. It’s going to affect Hezbollah.” 

Lebanon’s Health Ministry called on health workers treating the wounded to remove their wireless devices. REUTERS
A medic collecting blood donations for the injured people in Beirut.AFP via Getty Images

Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, was also among those injured in the blasts, according to Tehran’s Mehr news agency. 

Hezbollah officials claimed Israel was behind the pager attack. The Israeli military has not commented on the incident.  

“We hold the Israeli enemy fully responsible for this criminal aggression,” Hezbollah said in a statement, vowing that Israel “will certainly receive its fair punishment for this sinful aggression.”

Lebanon’s Health Ministry called on health workers treating the wounded to remove their wireless devices. 

Residents said the explosions continued to occur even 30 minutes after the initial blast. 

Israel and Hezbollah have engaged in near-daily attacks over the border since the terror group began attacking the Jewish state in solidarity with Hamas. 

https://nypost.com/2024/09/17/world-news/hundreds-of-hezbollah-fighters-wounded-when-their-pagers-all-explode/

'GSK makes Brooke Shields the star of shingles vaccination push'

 GSK has turned to Brooke Shields to get the message out about shingles vaccination. The drugmaker has worked with the model and actor to talk to female celebrities and patients aged 50 years and up about the power that comes from aging and how shingles threatens their health.

Supported by GSK, which sells the shingles vaccine Shingrix, Shields directed a three-minute film that features people including football mom Donna Kelce, actress Gina Torres and reality TV star Susan Noles. The contributions are connected by the themes of how women feel increasingly empowered as they turn 50 but are simultaneously increasingly vulnerable to health threats such as shingles.

“Turning 50 felt like a superpower to me,” Shields says in the film. “The unfair reality, in all of it, is just as we're coming into this power as we age, we're also experiencing new challenges, new vulnerabilities. After 50, all I can think about is this moment. My time, your time, is now. Protect your power.”

Shingles vaccination is part of how Shields wants women to protect their power. Alongside the discussion of the positives of aging, the film features comments from celebrities about people they know who have contracted shingles and the firsthand experience of patients. One woman describes how she caught shingles when her husband had cancer, taking her away from him when he needed her the most.

As well as working with Shields on the film, GSK collaborated with photographer Pamela Hanson to take shots of women “embracing their power.” The film and photos are part of a national public health initiative, THRIVE@50+, that GSK is running to educate people 50 and older about their risk for shingles. GSK is encouraging people to ask their doctor or pharmacist about the risk and vaccination. 

The education campaign comes as GSK works to increase uptake of Shingrix in the U.S. Global sales of the vaccine fell 4% in the second quarter, driven by a 36% drop in U.S. revenue. The decline in U.S. sales was partly caused by “lower demand, driven by challenges activating harder to reach consumers,” Luke Miels, chief commercial officer at GSK, said on the company’s second-quarter earnings call in July.

“The most motivated people obviously sought out the vaccine and we've been able to penetrate those populations to a very high degree. In our number one segment, we're around 66% penetration,” Miels said. “We have to work harder to get less engaged people, less motivated people. There is a huge plan to do that.”

Miels said the new plan includes “changing our marketing mix to focus on segments who are tougher to activate.” Making Shields part of the marketing mix has enabled GSK to win mainstream media coverage, with the star going on "Good Morning America" to discuss shingles and speaking to publications including People.

https://www.fiercepharma.com/marketing/gsk-makes-brooke-shields-star-shingles-vaccination-push