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.



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.