Lebanon says four dead in Israeli strike near southern Beirut hospital
According to the Lebanese health ministry, an Israeli air strike near the main government hospital in southern Beirut has resulted in the deaths of four individuals, including a child.
The strike reportedly targeted the car park of Rafik Hariri University Hospital, as confirmed by a hospital source to Reuters. The health ministry also stated that 24 people were injured in the attack.
This strike was part of a series of 13 air strikes that targeted southern Beirut on Monday evening. The Israeli military indicated that it was targeting facilities associated with Hezbollah.
An Israeli spokesperson had previously warned residents to evacuate several areas in southern Beirut, although Rafik Hariri Hospital was not included in those warnings.
Videos from the Dahiyeh neighborhood, where seven locations were announced as targets beforehand, depicted residents fleeing on foot and in vehicles as the strikes commenced.
One of the identified targets by the Israeli army was located approximately 400 meters from Beirut’s international airport, the only airport serving Lebanon.
Local media also reported images showing some windows in an airport building shattered by the blast.
Since issuing the earlier evacuation warnings, Israel has not made any further comments.
Separately, the Israeli military said earlier on Monday that it had identified a Hezbollah bunker concealed under a different hospital in southern Beirut, which has since been evacuated.
IDF Spokesman Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said without providing evidence that the bunker under the Sahel hospital in Haret Hreik held hundreds of millions of dollars in cash and gold that was being used to fund Hezbollah’s attacks on israel.
The director of Sahel hospital denied there was a bunker underneath and called on the Lebanese army to inspect the site.
Israel appears to have expanded its war against Hezbollah beyond military infrastructure and says it is targeting the group’s financial networks.
On Sunday night Israel carried out air strikes targeting branches of a financial association linked with Hezbollah in the southern suburbs of Lebanon’s capital Beirut, as well as the south and east of the country.
The Israeli military said it targeted money held by Al-Qard Al-Hassan Association (AQAH). It offers financial services to civilians in areas where Hezbollah has strong support, but Israel and the US accuse it of being a cover for the Iran-backed group to fund its activities.
There was no immediate comment from AQAH or Hezbollah.
Also on Monday, US President Joe Biden’s special envoy to the Middle East arrived in Beirut to explore the possibility of a negotiated end to the war.
Amos Hochstein said the US wanted to see an end to the war in Lebanon end “as soon as possible”.
He said that UN resolution 1701 – which calls for the Lebanese state to be the only armed force in southern Lebanon – was “not enough” and the US was looking into what more needed to be done.
Hezbollah fighters meanwhile continued to fire rockets into northern Israel, with the military reporting that 170 projectiles had crossed the border by late Monday evening.
Israel began an intense air campaign and ground invasion against Hezbollah after almost a year of cross-border fighting sparked by the war in Gaza, saying it wanted to ensure the safe return of tens of thousands of residents of Israeli border areas displaced by rocket attacks.
Hezbollah began firing rockets into northern Israel in support of Palestinians on 8 October 2023, the day after its ally Hamas’s deadly attack on Israel.
More than 2,400 people have been killed in Lebanon since then, including 1,800 in the past five weeks, according to the country’s health ministry. Israeli authorities say 59 people have been killed in northern Israel and the occupied Golan Heights.