Lebanon: One Person Killed, Three Students Injured in Israeli Drone Strike in Nabatieh

Black smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike on Kafar Hamam, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Friday, May 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)
Black smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike on Kafar Hamam, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Friday, May 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)
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Lebanon: One Person Killed, Three Students Injured in Israeli Drone Strike in Nabatieh

Black smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike on Kafar Hamam, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Friday, May 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)
Black smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike on Kafar Hamam, a Lebanese border village with Israel in south Lebanon, Friday, May 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

An Israeli drone hit a vehicle on a road in Nabatieh in South Lebanon, killing one person and injuring three students.
The Israeli drone missile hit a vehicle early on Thursday on the Kfar Dajjal road south of Nabatieh, killing one person. The vehicle was up in flames, according to Lebanese media outlets.
The missile hit the vehicle at the same time a bus full of students was passing close to the car, which left three students injured.

Civil Defense and Red Cross rescue teams transported the injured to the nearest hospital for treatment. No further details were reported.

Israeli forces have attacked several Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, including border surveillance outposts, caches of missiles and other weaponry and command centers.

Hezbollah has regularly fired missiles across the border with Israel over the past seven months, particularly since the Israeli incursion into the southern city of Rafah in the Gaza Strip. It has struck deeper inside Israel and introduced new and more advanced weaponry.



Beirut Remains Among the World’s ‘Worst’ Cities in Terms of Quality of Life

 A view of the Beirut waterfront (Reuters)
A view of the Beirut waterfront (Reuters)
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Beirut Remains Among the World’s ‘Worst’ Cities in Terms of Quality of Life

 A view of the Beirut waterfront (Reuters)
A view of the Beirut waterfront (Reuters)

Beirut maintained its low ranking on the list of Arab and international cities in the Quality of Life index, despite recording slight progress in the cost of living, purchasing power, and residential rent allowances, which was offset by a failure to achieve any improvement in safety, pollution, and health care.
The Lebanese capital ranked 171 out of 178 cities in the world in the measurement of the quality of life index issued by Numbeo.

The results are drawn according to eight main indicators that measure the level of quality of life. They include the purchasing power index, the safety index, healthcare, and cost of living, the ratio of house price to income that reflects the affordability of housing, the traffic or travel time index, the pollution index, as well as the climate index.
Beirut recorded a score of 73.3 points, and was preceded in the Arab world by Cairo, which scored 75.9 points, while the Gulf cities occupied the best positions among Arab cities included in the index.
In parallel, Beirut emerged as the sixth most expensive Arab city compared to prices in New York City, according to field surveys conducted periodically by the same international institution. The Lebanese capital registered a cost of living index of 45.2 points, ranking it 113th in the world. New York City is adopted as a reference indicator for measurement.
Moreover, Beirut recorded a score of 16.9 on the residential rental price index, which means that rental prices there are 83 percent less expensive than in New York City.
The commodity price index reached 34 points, 66 percent less expensive than the reference city.
Prices in Lebanon increased in the period between mid-2019 and mid-2022, before returning to a decline in the statistical survey period between mid-2023 and mid-2024.
The rise in the cost of living index recorded in the previous measurement period, which approached 100 percent in mid-2022, reflected the severity of the economic and social repercussions produced by the economic and financial crisis and the drastic local currency devaluation against the US dollar.
However, the average index witnessed a significant decline to register 45 percent in the middle of 2023, then decreased to 45.2 in mid-2024, as a result of the decline in all indicators of the survey, including the local purchasing power index, which improved from 11.7 points in mid- 2022 to 12.3 points mid-2023, and then to 20.5 mid-2024.