Israeli attacks leave no beds for intensive care, dialysis patients in Lebanon

Update Israeli attacks leave no beds for intensive care, dialysis patients in Lebanon
Smoke rises from Beirut's southern suburbs after a strike, amid the ongoing hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as seen from Hadath, Lebanon. (Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 06 October 2024
Follow

Israeli attacks leave no beds for intensive care, dialysis patients in Lebanon

Israeli attacks leave no beds for intensive care, dialysis patients in Lebanon
  • Heavy strikes shake southern Beirut
  • Airstrikes on edge of Baalbek Citadel force refugees from Palestinian camps out onto the streets

BEIRUT: Heavy Israeli airstrikes continued in Lebanon on Sunday, hitting Beirut and the Bekaa Valley.

The Ministry of Health recorded at least 23 deaths along with 93 injuries in a single day of airstrikes.

The Order of Nurses in Lebanon issued an urgent appeal to the international community, the World Health Organization, and the International Council of Nurses “to intervene quickly and pressure Israel to shield the healthcare sector from the devastating war that has spared neither people nor buildings.”

It warned that “the attacks have reached the healthcare sector, targeting hospitals that are beginning to go out of service, and targeting doctors, nurses, and paramedics in a blatant defiance of international laws and conventions.”

It also cautioned that “the rapid developments, which have so far claimed many lives of healthcare workers and paramedics, have made it very difficult to remain in hot areas to rescue the wounded, especially as the lives of nurses are now at risk.”

Suleiman Haroun, head of the private hospital owners’ syndicate in Lebanon, warned on Sunday that the hospital sector had “entered a danger zone.”

He said the crisis was fuelled by Israeli shelling near hospitals in the south and Beirut’s southern suburbs amid the massive displacement of people.

Haroun said: “The problem we currently face is providing beds for intensive care patients, ventilators, and beds for dialysis patients.

“We have been affected by the massive displacement of residents from the South, Bekaa, and Beirut’s southern suburb.

“The capacities of hospitals in safer areas have become less than what is needed.

“Hospitals still operating in the areas under Israeli attacks are evacuating their patients to other hospitals to make room for more wounded.”

Lebanon has 125 private hospitals providing medical services to many Lebanese citizens alongside government hospitals.

Twenty of these hospitals are in the country’s south, a similar number in Bekaa, and five in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

These hospitals have been subjected to Israeli shelling, reducing their operations to minimal levels, focusing only on emergency cases, Haroun said.

For instance, 19 patients are on ventilators in Al-Rassoul Al-Aazam Hospital.

Haroun said there was “no problem securing medical supplies or oxygen, as two factories are providing it, and they are outside the areas of the attacks.”

A witness told Arab News that streets once known for their dense buildings had become empty squares filled with rubble.

“The destruction seems infinite, and it is impossible to recognize any landmarks,” said the resident.

“We find ourselves unable to sleep as we constantly check our phones, awaiting Israeli alerts directed at the residents of the area after midnight, instructing us to evacuate,” the witness said.

“We place our hands over our hearts, fearing that our homes, which are all we have left, may be targeted. They claim to be concerned for our safety.

“Yet they seek revenge against us and punish the wounded by obstructing ambulances from reaching the sites of the bombings ... this is the pinnacle of criminality,” the witness added.

Emergency responders continue to face challenges in reaching targeted areas due to the surveillance of drones monitoring any movement in the vicinity, particularly in the southern suburbs.

The South Lebanon Water Establishment mourned the death of three staff members —Ali Sobhi Mansour, Hussein Raslan from Taybeh, and Karim Darwish from Nabatieh — who all died while working.

Israeli raids targeting the vicinity of the Palestinian refugee camps in Burj Al-Barajneh and Shatila facing the Ghobeiry area, meanwhile, led to the displacement of camp residents.

Refugees and a mix of non-Lebanese camp residents spread out on the roads in the heart of Beirut and around Horsh Beirut, where they sat in the open.

Israeli airstrikes resumed on Sunday afternoon on the southern suburbs, targeting the areas of Burj Al-Barajneh and Chiyah-Ghobeiry, following a morning airstrike on an area between Al-Laylaki and Mrayjeh.

A residential building collapsed in Burj Al-Barajneh as a result of the strike’s damage.

The Israeli airstrikes targeted the vicinity of the historic Roman Baalbek Citadel, with plumes of smoke observed ascending from the area.

The governor of Baalbek-Hermel, Bachir Khodr, verified that an assessment of the strike site revealed it was 600 meters from the citadel.

Airstrikes targeting a residential building in the town of Shmustar collapsed the structure, bringing it down on the heads of women, children and the elderly within.

Israeli airstrikes also targeted Qasr Naba, Talia, Temnin El-Fawqa, the town of Douris east of Baalbek, and Ali El-Nahri in the central Bekaa region.

Hezbollah reported ongoing military operations on the southern front against Israeli military installations, including “an aerial assault utilizing a squadron of suicide drones on the Samson base, which serves as a command supply center and regional supply unit, aiming at the positions of Israeli officers and soldiers.”

The group also targeted “the movement of Israeli troops at the Biyad Blida site with artillery fire,” “the Hadab Yarin site using rocket munitions,” and “the Shlomi settlement.”

Furthermore, when an Israeli unit attempted to infiltrate Khallet Shuaib in Blida, Hezbollah responded with artillery fire, compelling the unit to withdraw and resulting in casualties.

Hezbollah said it launched a rocket barrage against Israel’s operation on Sunday to evacuate wounded and deceased soldiers from the Manara settlement. 

The Israeli military announced on Sunday that around 40 rockets were fired from Lebanon targeting northern Israel.

Sirens were sounded in the Metula and Kiryat Shmona areas.

Some rockets were intercepted, while others landed in the vicinity.

Israeli army radio announced the interception of two ballistic missiles that were launched from Lebanon.

It said debris from one of the missiles fell in southern Haifa and appeared to be of the Fateh 110 type.


Israeli strike on Lebanese army center kills soldier, wounds 18 others

Israeli strike on Lebanese army center kills soldier, wounds 18 others
Updated 24 November 2024
Follow

Israeli strike on Lebanese army center kills soldier, wounds 18 others

Israeli strike on Lebanese army center kills soldier, wounds 18 others
  • It was the latest in a series of Israeli strikes that have killed over 40 Lebanese troops
  • Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister condemned it as an assault on US-led ceasefire efforts

BEIRUT: An Israeli strike on a Lebanese army center on Sunday killed one soldier and wounded 18 others, the Lebanese military said.

It was the latest in a series of Israeli strikes that have killed over 40 Lebanese troops, even as the military has largely kept to the sidelines in the war between Israel and Hezbollah militants.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which has said previous strikes on Lebanese troops were accidental and that they are not a target of its campaign against Hezbollah.

Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister, Najib Mikati, condemned it as an assault on US-led ceasefire efforts, calling it a “direct, bloody message rejecting all efforts and ongoing contacts” to end the war.

“(Israel is) again writing in Lebanese blood a brazen rejection of the solution that is being discussed,” a statement from his office read.

The strike occurred in southwestern Lebanon on the coastal road between Tyre and Naqoura, where there has been heavy fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.

Hezbollah began firing rockets, missiles and drones into Israel after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack out of the Gaza Strip ignited the war there. Hezbollah has portrayed the attacks as an act of solidarity with the Palestinians and Hamas. Iran supports both armed groups.

Israel has launched retaliatory airstrikes since the rocket fire began, and in September the low-level conflict erupted into all-out war, as Israel launched waves of airstrikes across large parts of Lebanon and killed Hezbollah’s top leader, Hassan Nasrallah, and several of his top commanders.

Israeli airstrikes early Saturday pounded central Beirut, killing at least 20 people and wounding 66, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. Hezbollah has continued to fire regular barrages into Israel, forcing people to race for shelters and occasionally killing or wounding them.

Israeli attacks have killed more than 3,500 people in Lebanon, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry. The fighting has displaced about 1.2 million people, or a quarter of Lebanon’s population.

On the Israeli side, about 90 soldiers and nearly 50 civilians have been killed by bombardments in northern Israel and in battle following Israel’s ground invasion in early October. Around 60,000 Israelis have been displaced from the country’s north.

The Biden administration has spent months trying to broker a ceasefire, and US envoy Amos Hochstein was back in the region last week.

The emerging agreement would pave the way for the withdrawal of Hezbollah militants and Israeli troops from southern Lebanon below the Litani River in accordance with the UN Security Council resolution that ended the 2006 war. Lebanese troops would patrol the area, with the presence of UN peacekeepers.

Lebanon’s army reflects the religious diversity of the country and is respected as a national institution, but it does not have the military capability to impose its will on Hezbollah or resist Israel’s invasion.


EU’s Borrell urges pressure on Israel, Hezbollah to accept US ceasefire proposal

EU’s Borrell urges pressure on Israel, Hezbollah to accept US ceasefire proposal
Updated 48 min 1 sec ago
Follow

EU’s Borrell urges pressure on Israel, Hezbollah to accept US ceasefire proposal

EU’s Borrell urges pressure on Israel, Hezbollah to accept US ceasefire proposal
  • The EU’s foreign policy chief warned that Lebanon was “on the brink of collapse”

BEIRUT: The European Union’s foreign policy chief called on Sunday during a visit to Beirut for pressure to be exerted on both the Israeli government and on Lebanon’s Hezbollah to accept a US ceasefire proposal.
Speaking at a news conference in Beirut, Josep Borell also urged Lebanese leaders to pick a president to end a two-year power vacuum in the country, and he pledged 200 million euros in support for Lebanon’s armed forces. 

Lebanon on 'brink of collapse'

The EU’s foreign policy chief warned that Lebanon was “on the brink of collapse” after Israel launched an intense air campaign two months ago following nearly a year of clashes with Hezbollah.
“Back in September I came and was still hoping we could prevent a full-fledged war of Israel attacking Lebanon. Two months later Lebanon is on the brink of collapse,” Josep Borrell told reporters in Beirut.


Israeli army orders Gaza City suburb evacuated, spurring new displacement wave

Israeli army orders Gaza City suburb evacuated, spurring new displacement wave
Updated 24 November 2024
Follow

Israeli army orders Gaza City suburb evacuated, spurring new displacement wave

Israeli army orders Gaza City suburb evacuated, spurring new displacement wave
  • Israeli military blames Hamas rocket fire for renewed evacuation directive
  • Palestinians say hospitals in north Gaza barely functioning

CAIRO: The Israeli military issued new evacuation orders to residents in areas of an eastern Gaza City suburb, setting off a new wave of displacement on Sunday, and a Gaza hospital director was injured in an Israeli drone attack, Palestinian medics said.
The new orders for the Shejaia suburb posted by the Israeli army spokesperson on X on Saturday night were blamed on Palestinian militants firing rockets from that heavily built-up district in the north of the Gaza Strip.
“For your safety, you must evacuate immediately to the south,” the military’s post said. The rocket volley on Saturday was claimed by Hamas’ armed wing, which said it had targeted an Israeli army base over the border.
Footage circulated on social and Palestinian media, which Reuters could not immediately verify, showed residents leaving Shejaia on donkey carts and rickshaws, with others, including children carrying backpacks, walking.
Families living in the targeted areas began fleeing their homes after nightfall on Saturday and into Sunday’s early hours, residents and Palestinian media said — the latest in multiple waves of displacement since the war began 13 months ago.
In central Gaza, health officials said at least 10 Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes on the urban camps of Al-Maghazi and Al-Bureij since Saturday night.
Hospital director wounded by gunfire
In north Gaza, where Israeli forces have been operating against regrouping Hamas militants since early last month, health officials said an Israeli drone dropped bombs on Kamal Adwan Hospital, injuring its director Hussam Abu Safiya.
“This will not stop us from completing our humanitarian mission and we will continue to do this job at any cost,” Abu Safiya said in a video statement circulated by the health ministry on Sunday.
“We are being targeted daily. They targeted me a while ago but this will not deter us...,” he said from his hospital bed.
Israeli forces say armed militants use civilian buildings including housing blocks, hospitals and schools for operational cover. Hamas denies this, accusing Israeli forces of indiscriminately targeting populated areas.
Kamal Adwan is one of three hospitals in north Gaza that are barely operational as the health ministry said the Israeli forces have detained and expelled medical staff and prevented emergency medical, food and fuel supplies from reaching them.
In the past few weeks, Israel said it had facilitated the delivery of medical and fuel supplies and the transfer of patients from north Gaza hospitals in collaboration with international agencies such as the World Health Organization.
Residents in three embattled north Gaza towns — Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun — said Israeli forces had blown up hundreds of houses since renewing operations in an area that Israel said months ago had been cleared of militants.
Palestinians say Israel appears determined to depopulate the area permanently to create a buffer zone along the northern edge of Gaza, an accusation Israel denies.
Israel’s campaign in Gaza has killed more than 44,000 people, uprooted nearly all the enclave’s 2.3 million population at least once, according to Gaza officials, while reducing wide swathes of the narrow coastal territory to rubble.
The war erupted in response to a cross-border attack by Hamas-led militants on Oct. 7, 2023 in which gunmen killed around 1,200 people and took more than 250 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.


Iran to hold nuclear talks with three European powers in Geneva on Friday, Kyodo reports

Iran to hold nuclear talks with three European powers in Geneva on Friday, Kyodo reports
Updated 24 November 2024
Follow

Iran to hold nuclear talks with three European powers in Geneva on Friday, Kyodo reports

Iran to hold nuclear talks with three European powers in Geneva on Friday, Kyodo reports
  • A senior Iranian official confirmed that the meeting would go ahead next Friday

DUBAI: Iran plans to hold talks about its disputed nuclear program with three European powers on Nov. 29 in Geneva, Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported on Sunday, days after the UN atomic watchdog passed a resolution against Tehran.
Iran reacted to the resolution, which was proposed by Britain, France, Germany and the United States, with what government officials called various measures such as activating numerous new and advanced centrifuges, machines that enrich uranium.
Kyodo said Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s government was seeking a solution to the nuclear impasse ahead of the inauguration in January of US President-elect Donald Trump.
A senior Iranian official confirmed that the meeting would go ahead next Friday, adding that “Tehran has always believed that the nuclear issue should be resolved through diplomacy. Iran has never left the talks.”
In 2018, the then-Trump administration exited Iran’s 2015 nuclear pact with six major powers and reimposed harsh sanctions on Iran, prompting Tehran to violate the pact’s nuclear limits, with moves such as rebuilding stockpiles of enriched uranium, refining it to higher fissile purity and installing advanced centrifuges to speed up output.
Indirect talks between President Joe Biden’s administration and Tehran to try to revive the pact have failed, but Trump said in his election campaign in September that “We have to make a deal, because the consequences are impossible. We have to make a deal.”


Israel cracks down on Palestinian citizens who speak out against the war in Gaza

Israel cracks down on Palestinian citizens who speak out against the war in Gaza
Updated 24 November 2024
Follow

Israel cracks down on Palestinian citizens who speak out against the war in Gaza

Israel cracks down on Palestinian citizens who speak out against the war in Gaza
  • Israeli authorities have opened more incitement cases against Palestinian citizens during the war in Gaza than in the previous five years combined

UMM AL-FAHM, Israel: Israel’s yearlong crackdown against Palestinian citizens who speak out against the war in Gaza is prompting many to self-censor out of fear of being jailed and further marginalized in society, while some still find ways to dissent — carefully.
Ahmed Khalefa’s life turned upside down after he was charged with inciting terrorism for chanting in solidarity with Gaza at an anti-war protest in October 2023.
The lawyer and city counselor from central Israel says he spent three difficult months in jail followed by six months detained in an apartment. It’s unclear when he’ll get a final verdict on his guilt or innocence. Until then, he’s forbidden from leaving his home from dusk to dawn.
Khalefa is one of more than 400 Palestinian citizens of Israel who, since the start of the war in Gaza, have been investigated by police for “incitement to terrorism” or “incitement to violence,” according to Adalah, a legal rights group for minorities. More than half of those investigated were also criminally charged or detained, Adalah said.
“Israel made it clear they see us more as enemies than as citizens,” Khalefa said in an interview at a cafe in his hometown of Umm Al-Fahm, Israel’s second-largest Palestinian city.
Israel has roughly 2 million Palestinian citizens, whose families remained within the borders of what became Israel in 1948. Among them are Muslims and Christians, and they maintain family and cultural ties to Gaza and the West Bank, which Israel captured in 1967.
Israel says its Palestinian citizens enjoy equal rights, including the right to vote, and they are well-represented in many professions. However, Palestinians are widely discriminated against in areas like housing and the job market.
Israeli authorities have opened more incitement cases against Palestinian citizens during the war in Gaza than in the previous five years combined, Adalah’s records show. Israeli authorities have not said how many cases ended in convictions and imprisonment. The Justice Ministry said it did not have statistics on those convictions.
Just being charged with incitement to terrorism or identifying with a terrorist group can land a suspect in detention until they’re sentenced, under the terms of a 2016 law.
In addition to being charged as criminals, Palestinians citizens of Israel — who make up around 20 percent of the country’s population — have lost jobs, been suspended from schools and faced police interrogations posting online or demonstrating, activists and rights watchdogs say.
It’s had a chilling effect.
“Anyone who tries to speak out about the war will be imprisoned and harassed in his work and education,” said Oumaya Jabareen, whose son was jailed for eight months after an anti-war protest. “People here are all afraid, afraid to say no to this war.”
Jabareen was among hundreds of Palestinians who filled the streets of Umm Al-Fahm earlier this month carrying signs and chanting political slogans. It appeared to be the largest anti-war demonstration in Israel since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack. But turnout was low, and Palestinian flags and other national symbols were conspicuously absent. In the years before the war, some protests could draw tens of thousands of Palestinians in Israel.
Authorities tolerated the recent protest march, keeping it under heavily armed supervision. Helicopters flew overhead as police with rifles and tear gas jogged alongside the crowd, which dispersed without incident after two hours. Khalefa said he chose not to attend.
Shortly after the Oct. 7 attack, Israel’s far-right government moved quickly to invigorate a task force that has charged Palestinian citizens of Israel with “supporting terrorism” for posts online or protesting against the war. At around the same time, lawmakers amended a security bill to increase surveillance of online activity by Palestinians in Israel, said Nadim Nashif, director of the digital rights group 7amleh. These moves gave authorities more power to restrict freedom of expression and intensify their arrest campaigns, Nashif said.
The task force is led by Itamar Ben-Gvir, a hard-line national security minister who oversees the police. His office said the task force has monitored thousands of posts allegedly expressing support for terror organizations and that police arrested “hundreds of terror supporters,” including public opinion leaders, social media influencers, religious figures, teachers and others.
“Freedom of speech is not the freedom to incite ... which harms public safety and our security,” his office said in a statement.
But activists and rights groups say the government has expanded its definition of incitement much too far, targeting legitimate opinions that are at the core of freedom of expression.
Myssana Morany, a human rights attorney at Adalah, said Palestinian citizens have been charged for seemingly innocuous things like sending a meme of a captured Israeli tank in Gaza in a private WhatsApp group chat. Another person was charged for posting a collage of children’s photos, captioned in Arabic and English: “Where were the people calling for humanity when we were killed?” The feminist activist group Kayan said over 600 women called its hotline because of blowback in the workplace for speaking out against the war or just mentioning it unfavorably.
Over the summer, around two dozen anti-war protesters in the port city of Haifa were only allowed to finish three chants before police forcefully scattered the gathering into the night. Yet Jewish Israelis demanding a hostage release deal protest regularly — and the largest drew hundreds of thousands to the streets of Tel Aviv.
Khalefa, the city counselor, is not convinced the crackdown on speech will end, even if the war eventually does. He said Israeli prosecutors took issue with slogans that broadly praised resistance and urged Gaza to be strong, but which didn’t mention violence or any militant groups. For that, he said, the government is trying to disbar him, and he faces up to eight years in prison.
“They wanted to show us the price of speaking out,” Khalefa said.