Terrified Lebanese Families Flee Massive Israeli Bombardment

 Cars go north from Lebanon's southern coastal city Sidon as some Lebanese flee heavy Israeli bombardment, Lebanon September 23, 2024. (Reuters)
Cars go north from Lebanon's southern coastal city Sidon as some Lebanese flee heavy Israeli bombardment, Lebanon September 23, 2024. (Reuters)
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Terrified Lebanese Families Flee Massive Israeli Bombardment

 Cars go north from Lebanon's southern coastal city Sidon as some Lebanese flee heavy Israeli bombardment, Lebanon September 23, 2024. (Reuters)
Cars go north from Lebanon's southern coastal city Sidon as some Lebanese flee heavy Israeli bombardment, Lebanon September 23, 2024. (Reuters)

Families from south Lebanon clogged the highways north on Monday, fleeing an expanding Israeli bombardment for an uncertain future with children crammed onto parents' laps, suitcases tied to car roofs and dark smoke rising behind them.

Countless cars, vans and pick-up trucks were loaded with belongings and filled with people, sometimes several generations to a vehicle, while other families had fled fast, taking only the bare essentials as bombs rained down from above.

"When the strikes happened in the morning on the houses, I grabbed all the important papers and we got out. Strikes all around us. It was terrifying," said Abed Afou whose village of Yater was hit heavily in the dawn barrage.

Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah group have been trading fire across the border since the war in Gaza began last year with an attack by Hezbollah's ally Hamas, but Israel has rapidly intensified its military campaign over the past week.

On Monday, as the bombardment escalated to encompass more parts of Lebanon, people received pre-recorded telephone calls on behalf of Israel's military telling them to leave their homes for their own safety.

Afou, who had stayed in Yater since the start of the fighting despite being only about 5 km (3 miles) from the Israeli border, decided to leave as blasts started striking residential houses in the district, he said.

"I had one hand on my son's back telling him not to be afraid," he said. Afou's family with three sons aged 6-13, and several other relatives, were now stuck on the highway as traffic crawled north.

They did not know where they would stay, he said, but just wanted to reach Beirut.

'WE WILL RETURN'

As the traffic passed through Sidon long queues formed. A van crawled by, its back doors hanging open and a family sitting inside, a woman in a red scarf by the door with one foot hanging out and a boy standing in the middle, hanging onto a rail.

By the roadside a group from Lebanon's security forces, wearing blue jeans and black gilets marked "Police" stood with their guns.

A man leaned across a woman in the passenger seat of a car to shout through the window: "We will be back. God willing, we will be back. Tell (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu that we will return."

But another man, who gave only his first name Ahmed, said only God knew if his family could ever go back home. He had pulled up by the roadside, his van filled with more than 10 people, many of them children.

"Strikes. Warplanes. Destruction. No one is left there. Everyone has fled. We took our belongings and left," he said.

Lebanon's health ministry said more than 270 people were killed in the bombardment and an official said it was the country's deadliest single day since the end of the civil war in 1990.

Israel said it had struck about 800 targets connected to Hezbollah and that buildings it hit contained weapons belonging to the group.

Some had witnessed the destruction up close.

"The strength and intensity of the bombing are something we haven't witnessed before in all the previous wars," said Abu Hassan Kahoul, on his way to Beirut with his family after two buildings were levelled near the apartment block where he lives.

"Small children don't know what is happening but there's fear in their eyes," he added.

Even in Beirut there was growing alarm, and parents rushed to pull their children from schools as Israel warned of more strikes. "The situation is not reassuring," said a man called Issa, coming to pick up a young student.



Israeli Soldiers Open Fire inside a West Bank Hospital While Searching for Fighters’ Bodies

 Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
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Israeli Soldiers Open Fire inside a West Bank Hospital While Searching for Fighters’ Bodies

 Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)
Israeli troops enter the complex of the Turkish hospital, where they searched for the bodies of those killed in an airstrike, Israel said was targeting fighters, in the West Bank city of Tubas, Tuesday Dec. 3, 2024. (AP)

Israeli soldiers opened fire inside a hospital in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday during a raid to seize the bodies of alleged fighters targeted in earlier airstrikes, a Palestinian doctor working at the hospital told The Associated Press.

Soldiers entered the Turkish Hospital complex in Tubas after the bodies of two Palestinians killed and one wounded in airstrikes in the northern West Bank on Tuesday were brought there, said Dr. Mahmoud Ghanam, who works in the hospital’s emergency department. The troops briefly handcuffed and arrested Ghanam and another doctor.

“The army entered in a brutal way, and they were shooting inside the emergency department,” said Ghanam. “They handcuffed us and took me and my colleague.”

The military confirmed that its troops were operating around the hospital searching for those targeted in the airstrikes, which they said had hit a militant cell near the Palestinian town of Al-Aqaba in the Jordan Valley. It denied that troops had entered the hospital building or fired gunshots inside.

The soldiers left after learning that the wounded man had been transferred to another hospital, Ghanam said. The soldiers wanted to take the bodies of the two men killed in the strike, but the hospital’s manager refused to hand over the bodies, Ghanam said.

Israeli raids on hospitals in the West Bank are rare but have grown more common since the start of the Israel-Hamas war. In Gaza, Israeli troops have systematically besieged, raided and damaged many hospitals.

About 800 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack out of Gaza ignited the war there. Israel has carried out near-daily military raids in the West Bank that it says are aimed at preventing attacks on Israelis — attacks which have also been on the rise.

Israel captured the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians seek all three territories for an independent state.