Israel carried out an airstrike in the southern suburbs of Beirut on Friday that killed at least 12 people and wounded 66, in what it said was a targeted assassination of a senior Hezbollah leader.
The Israeli military said the strike killed Ibrahim Aqil, a figure on the group’s top military council who is wanted by the US for his alleged connection with the 1983 bombing of the US embassy in Beirut. There was no immediate confirmation of his death from Hezbollah.
Security sources told Reuters the targeted area was near key Hezbollah installations.
The strike was the latest in a series of attacks that rocked Lebanon this week, after an extraordinary two-stage operation that made thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies commonly carried by Hezbollah members explode simultaneously. The operation, presumed to be by Israel, left more than 3,000 people wounded and at least 42 dead.
It was the third time Beirut, Lebanon’s capital, has been hit by an Israeli airstrike since fighting between Hezbollah and Israel started on 8 October last year after the former launched rockets “in solidarity” with Hamas’s attack the previous day.
Videos of the aftermath showed burnt cars and rubble thrown across the street from a building whose first two floors appeared to have been blown out. Lebanon’s National News Agency reported that four rockets had struck the building in Jamous, a residential area in southern Beirut, during rush hour.
The Lebanese Civil Defense asked citizens to remain indoors to keep roads clear for emergency workers transporting the wounded to hospitals. Lebanese people shared pictures of loved ones who had gone missing in the aftermath of the strike, attaching their phone numbers in case anyone had seen them.
On Thursday night there was the most intense series of Israeli airstrikes carried out in south Lebanon since October. Israeli warplanes carried out dozens of strikes on border villages across the south, marking what the Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, said was the beginning of a new phase in the war.
Hassan Cheet, a first responder in the border village of Kafr Kila, said: “The destruction is as far as you can see. They brought down about 30 houses overnight. An entire neighbourhood was levelled.”
He shared pictures of flattened houses and rescue vehicles clearing rubble from the main road along the border fence with Israel, where emergency workers were accompanied by UN peacekeepers for their safety.
Cheet said: “Thank God there were no civilians or human losses. The rest can be dealt with.”
In response to the Israeli barrage, Hezbollah launched more than 100 rockets at northern Israel on Friday morning, hitting Israeli military bases in the occupied Golan Heights.
In Beirut, weary doctors braced themselves for another barrage of wounded after hearing the news of Friday’s attack.
“Truly, we’ve been working around the clock. We’ve been done 50 surgeries in the past two-and-a-half days, and we only have three rooms because you need specialised microscopes to operate,” said Sami Rizk, the chief executive of LAU Medical Center-Rizk hospital.
The pager and walkie-talkie explosions that ripped through Lebanon brought thousands of patients to hospitals in just a few hours. Doctors described apocalyptic scenes in emergency rooms, where overwhelmed staff had to treat patients on the floor due to lack of available beds.
Many patients had lost hands and eyes. Most were reaching for their pagers or had brought them to their face when they exploded.
“This is to us is a new type of war where it is one specialty that is necessary: ophthalmology,” Rizk said. “In war cases, ophthalmologists are used 5 to 10% of the time; here it was over 90%.” He added that it was as if he was looking at “the same patient” over and over.
The resulting injuries would be long-lasting and require lifelong care, Rizk said. “No more fingers and no more eyes: this will be tough in the long term. It’s going to be a heavy burden on the society and these poor young guys.”
For Lebanon’s health officials, the attacks functioned as a grim stress test of the healthcare sector, which had been preparing for mass-casualty events since the war began in October.
Firass Abiad, the Lebanese health minister, said: “The health sector in Lebanon has been tested and has always been found able to respond. The Lebanese health sector is really a resilient health system.”
He said that despite the country’s five-year-long economic crisis, it has been able to cope with successive crises such as Covid-19 and the 2020 Beirut port blast that wounded 7,000 and killed at least 218 people.
Despite successfully dealing with two massive attacks in one week, the health minister eyed the future warily, as Friday’s attack brought the possibility of a country-wide war with Israel ever closer.
“Does this mean that we need to keep putting it through the test? I hope not, and I hope we never find out which crisis will be sufficient to bring it to its knees,” Abiad said.
In the UK, the foreign secretary, David Lammy, discussed preparations to evacuate remaining Britons from Lebanon, having already urged UK nationals to leave the country given the hostilities with Israel.
He repeated the Foreign Office’s warning to British nationals, urging them to leave Lebanon “while commercial options remain”, as the situation “could deteriorate rapidly”.