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Middle East crisis live: three dead and others injured after Israeli airstrike on Beirut, says Lebanon | Middle East and north Africa

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Key events

As we mentioned in the opening post, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has backtracked on his decision to appoint vice admiral Eli Sharvit as the next head of the Shin Bet, some 24 hours after making the surprise announcement.

Netanyahu’s office said that following some “further thought” he had told Sharvit that he will now consider other candidates to replace the (former) head of Israel’s security service Ronen Bar, whose firing is due to take effect pending a court review.

The Israeli cabinet formally approved the early dismissal of Bar late last month, over the failure to anticipate the Hamas-led 7 October attack on southern Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage.

Bar was appointed in October 2021 for a five-year term as the head of the Shin Bet – Israel’s domestic intelligence agency equivalent to the UK’s MI5.

As my colleague Lorenzo Tondo notes in this story, Bar’s relations with Netanyahu had been strained even before the 7 October attack in 2023, notably over a proposed judicial overhaul that had split the country.

Relations worsened after the 4 March release of the internal Shin Bet report on the attack, which acknowledged the agency’s own failures but also pointed to wider policy issues in the run-up.

Netanyahu has denied accusations that the sacking of Bar, which prompted mass protests, was aimed at thwarting a Shin Bet investigation into allegations of financial ties between Qatar and aides in the prime minister’s office.

Ronen Bar was formally dismissed by the Israeli cabinet last month. Photograph: Gil Cohen-Magen/Reuters
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