The Al-Manar Hezbollah television channel reported that an apparatus, suspected to be a bugging device, was discovered some 150 meters from the border fence between Israel and Lebanon. According to the report, the device was discovered in the village of al-Adisa.

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The Hezbollah-affiliated Al Miadin news channel added that the Lebanese army is surrounding the area.

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In November, it was reported by the Lebanese paper As-Safir that a committee had been touring southern Lebanon to expose Israeli spying technologies.

The chairman of the Lebanese parliament Nabih Berri said that Israel is deploying and constructing spy stations along the border from En Nakura, on the Mediterranean Sea, to the Sheeba Farms in the east.

In October, it was reported that an alleged spy-eagle was captured in the Lebanese town of Achkout by amateur hunters, and transmission equipment tied to its leg indicated a connection to the Tel Aviv University.

According to the As-Safir newspaper, the Lebanese government demanded that a committee to examine Israeli espionage be formed. The committee is composed of representatives from the local communication office and the Lebanese army. Up to now, the committee performed dozens of patrols in southern Lebanon and discovered Israeli radar stations and wiretapping devices.

Last year, the Lebanese minister of telecommunications, Nicolas Sehnaoui, said: "It has become clear that the stations Israel built close to the border allow it to receive everything that passes through the air, from waves and vibrations, to tapping of telephone cables that are above ground."

The chairman of the Lebanese parliament's committee on media and telecommunications, Hassan Fadlallah, who is also a member of Hezbollah, told As-Safir that he would convene an emergency meeting of the committee on Monday. In his words, "What the Israeli enemy is doing on the border – no self-respecting country would agree to."