Like in Gaza, Israel Attacks Lebanon’s Healthcare Sector

Like in Gaza, Israel Attacks Lebanon’s Healthcare Sector
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Like in Gaza, Israel Attacks Lebanon’s Healthcare Sector

Like in Gaza, Israel Attacks Lebanon’s Healthcare Sector

Israel is executing a systematic plan to weaken Lebanon’s healthcare sector, aiming to shut down hospitals and medical facilities, starting from the south and spreading to the Bekaa and southern Beirut.

The latest strike hit the entrance of Rafic Hariri University Hospital in Beirut’s Jnah area, just an hour after Israeli forces warned Sahel Hospital to evacuate, alleging a Hezbollah tunnel with $500 million underneath.

Lebanon’s Health Minister Firass Abiad condemned this as an “Israeli attack on the healthcare sector.”

Jihad Saadeh, director of Rafic Hariri Hospital, said the facility was damaged by Israeli shrapnel but confirmed they are still operating at full capacity despite the severe damage.

He stated that the hospital would not be evacuated, and urgent repairs are needed.

Fadi Sinan, Director-General of the Ministry of Health, denied any involvement of the healthcare sector in non-medical activities and called on the international community to help stop Israel’s attacks on hospitals.

The strikes have damaged three hospitals in the Bekaa and shut down all facilities in southern Beirut.

In response, MP Bilal Abdallah sent a memo to global health organizations, documenting Israel’s violations of the healthcare sector.

Abdallah also questioned why Israel would target Rafic Hariri Hospital, which serves the poor and provides essential care like dialysis and cancer treatment, rejecting Israeli claims that it was linked to Hezbollah.

In comments to Asharq Al-Awsat, Abdallah argued that Israel’s assault on Lebanon’s healthcare system was a reaction to the sector’s effectiveness in treating casualties from Israeli attacks and part of a broader attempt to undermine the resilience of the Lebanese people.

Following the attacks, Abiad set up an emergency operations rooms to distribute patients across remaining hospitals. Mobile clinics are also providing care to displaced people across the country.

Sahel Hospital’s media tour prompted an angry response from Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee, who accused journalists of ignoring alleged Hezbollah bunkers.

Hospital director Fadi Alameh dismissed these claims as false, saying the facility has no political ties and was turned into a field hospital after other hospitals were damaged.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, Alameh called the Israeli allegations about a Hezbollah money vault under the hospital “pure fabrication,” part of a strategy to destroy Lebanon’s healthcare system—similar to what Israel had done in Gaza.

Despite later assurances from the Israeli military that Sahel Hospital would not be bombed, Alameh insisted that a Lebanese army engineering team inspect the hospital and its surroundings to disprove the claims of an underground Hezbollah facility.

Israeli army spokesperson Daniel Hagari, meanwhile, maintained that Hezbollah had constructed a tunnel under a hospital in southern Beirut, allegedly storing hundreds of millions of dollars in cash and gold.



No Breakthrough in Gaza Talks, Egyptian and Palestinian Sources Say

 Palestinians carry a casualty removed from under the rubble at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip April 13, 2025. (Reuters)
Palestinians carry a casualty removed from under the rubble at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip April 13, 2025. (Reuters)
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No Breakthrough in Gaza Talks, Egyptian and Palestinian Sources Say

 Palestinians carry a casualty removed from under the rubble at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip April 13, 2025. (Reuters)
Palestinians carry a casualty removed from under the rubble at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip April 13, 2025. (Reuters)

The latest round of talks in Cairo to restore the defunct Gaza ceasefire and free Israeli hostages ended with no apparent breakthrough, Palestinian and Egyptian sources said on Monday.

The sources said Hamas had stuck to its position that any agreement must lead to an end to the war in Gaza.

Israel, which restarted its military campaign in Gaza last month after a ceasefire agreed in January unraveled, has said it will not end the war until Hamas is stamped out. The group has ruled out any proposal that it lay down its arms.

But despite that fundamental disagreement, the sources said a Hamas delegation led by the group's Gaza Chief Khalil Al-Hayya had shown some flexibility over how many hostages it could free in return for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel should a truce be extended.

An Egyptian source told Reuters the latest proposal to extend the truce would see Hamas free an increased number of hostages. Israeli minister Zeev Elkin, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet, told Army Radio on Monday that Israel was seeking the release of around 10 hostages, raised from previous Hamas consent to free five.

Hamas has asked for more time to respond to the latest proposal, the Egyptian source said.

"Hamas has no problem, but it wants guarantees Israel agrees to begin the talks on the second phase of the ceasefire agreement" leading to an end to the war, the Egyptian source said.

AIRSTRIKES

Hamas freed 33 Israeli hostages in return for hundreds of Palestinian detainees during the six-week first phase of the ceasefire which began in January. But the second phase, which was meant to begin at the start of March and lead to the end of the war, was never launched.

Since restarting their military campaign last month, Israeli forces have killed more than 1,500 Palestinians, many of them civilians, and uprooted hundreds of thousands, seizing swathes of territory and imposing a total blockade on all supplies to the entire enclave.

Meanwhile, 59 Israeli hostages remain in the hands of Hamas. Israel believes up to 24 of them are alive.

Palestinians say the wave of Israeli attacks since the collapse of the ceasefire has been among the deadliest and most intense of the war, hitting an exhausted population surviving in the enclave's ruins.

In Jabalia, a community on Gaza's northern edge, rescue workers in orange vests were trying to smash through concrete with a sledgehammer to recover bodies buried underneath a building that collapsed in an Israeli strike.

Feet and a hand of one person could be seen under a concrete slab. Men carried a body wrapped in a blanket. Workers at the scene said as many as 25 people had been killed.

The Israeli military said it had struck there against fighters planning an ambush.

In Khan Younis in the south, a camp of makeshift tents had been shredded into piles of debris by an airstrike. Families had returned to poke through the rubbish in search of belongings.

"We used to live in houses. They were destroyed. Now, our tents have been destroyed too. We don't know where to stay," said Ismail al-Raqab, who returned to the area after his family fled the raid before dawn.

EGYPT'S SISI MEETS QATARI EMIR

The leaders of the two Arab countries that have led the ceasefire mediation efforts, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, met in Doha on Sunday. The Egyptian source said Sisi had called for additional international guarantees for a truce agreement, beyond those provided by Egypt and Qatar themselves.

US President Donald Trump, who has backed Israel's decision to resume its campaign and called for the Palestinian population of Gaza to leave the territory, said last week that progress was being made in returning the hostages.

The war was triggered by Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, more than 50,900 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive, according to local health authorities.