A Lebanese Family Was Holding a Sunday Gathering When an Israeli Strike Toppled Their Building

First responders inspect the rubble of a building after it was targeted by an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Ain El Delb on September 29, 2024. (AFP)
First responders inspect the rubble of a building after it was targeted by an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Ain El Delb on September 29, 2024. (AFP)
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A Lebanese Family Was Holding a Sunday Gathering When an Israeli Strike Toppled Their Building

First responders inspect the rubble of a building after it was targeted by an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Ain El Delb on September 29, 2024. (AFP)
First responders inspect the rubble of a building after it was targeted by an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Ain El Delb on September 29, 2024. (AFP)

It was Sunday, family time for most in Lebanon, and Hecham al-Baba was visiting his sister. She insisted he and their older brother stay for lunch, hoping to prolong the warm gathering in stressful times.
The brother declined. Like many in Lebanon, he hadn’t been sleeping because of Israel’s intensifying airstrikes, so he left to take a nap.
The 60-year-old al-Baba, on his annual visit from Germany to see his family in Lebanon, stayed. His sister Donize even convinced him to call an old flame over for coffee. He excitedly stepped into the bathroom to clean up before his visitor arrived.
Within seconds, a huge boom shook the basement apartment. Al-Baba fell to the floor. Something hit him in the chest, knocking the breath out of him. He pulled himself up and reached for the door, screaming his sister’s name. A second explosion threw him back to the floor. The bathroom ceiling — and the whole building above it — collapsed on his back.
An Israeli air raid hit the six-story residential building in Ain el Delb, a neighborhood outside the coastal city of Sidon. The entire building tipped over down a hillside and landed on its face, taking with it 17 apartments full of families and visitors. More than 70 people were killed, and 60 injured, The Associated Press reported.
Israel said the Sept. 29 strike targeted a Hezbollah commander and claimed the building was a headquarters for the group. It could not be independently confirmed whether any of the residents belonged to Hezbollah.
In a video that surfaced online mourning one of the people believed to be residing in the building, he appeared in an old photo wearing military fatigues, a sign of affiliation with Hezbollah.
Either way, experts say the strike illustrates Israel’s willingness to kill significant numbers of civilians in pursuit of a single target. That tactic has fueled the high death toll among Palestinians in Gaza in Israel’s year-old campaign against Hamas.
Israel has intensified bombardment of Lebanon since Sept. 23, vowing to cripple Hezbollah, which began firing into northern Israel after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack triggered the war in Gaza. Israel says it is targeting Hezbollah members and infrastructure and says the group places military assets in civilian areas.
Some 2,000 people have been killed, including Hezbollah fighters and commanders — but also hundreds of civilians, often in strikes on homes.
“It seems to be a feature so similar to Gaza in that these are families being killed together in single strikes,” said Emily Tripp, director of the London-based group Airwars, which monitors conflicts.
In the first week of Israel's escalation, it hit a home in Tyre province, killing a family of 15, all of them women and children except for a Hezbollah member. A strike in Byblos killed six family members of a Hezbollah fighter, who had already died in fighting a month before — raising questions about the quality of intelligence used in the strikes. A hit on a shack housing Syrian migrant worker families killed 23.
The strike in Ain el Delb was one of the deadliest of the Israeli campaign. Among those killed were al-Baba’s sister, her husband and two of their children, a daughter in her 20s and a teenage boy.
Al-Baba was trapped for hours, with the rubble pressing him in an agonizing, kneeling position, his neck twisted, his face stuck to the bathroom floor, unable to feel his legs. He knew his sister’s family was dead from the constant, unanswered ringing of their phones.
“No one said a word. I didn’t hear a movement,” he said.
'People don't know. Israel knows' The Israeli military said it enacted evacuation procedures before acting on confirmed intelligence in the Ain el Delb strike. Residents who spoke to The Associated Press said they received no warning.
“I wish we had. We would have left,” said Abdul-Hamid Ramadan, who lived on the top floor and whose wife Jinan and daughter Julia were killed. “I would have lost my home. But not my wife and daughter.”
Israel says it often issues evacuation orders before striking. But in Lebanon, as in Gaza, rights groups say the advance warnings are often inadequate and come in the middle of the night or through social media.
Ramadan, a retired army officer, said he knew of no Hezbollah members or weapons in the building, where he has lived for more than 20 years.
No one thought the neighborhood — where most residents are Sunni Muslims and Christians — would be on the list of Israeli targets. In the building, 15 out of the 17 apartments were occupied by longtime residents who all knew each other. Displaced people from the south had begun arriving a week earlier, seeking shelter with relatives in the building.
Al-Baba said his sister confided in him before she was killed that she was concerned about a much-loved Shiite tenant, mainly because he had been receiving guests. She feared he may be a target of Israel and asked her brother if she should leave. She decided to stay because she had no idea where to go.
Neither al-Baba nor his sister knew anything about the tenant being linked to Hezbollah.
Israeli strikes have stoked fears among Lebanese over the possibility their building could be hit for hosting someone who Israel claims, rightly or wrongly, to be connected to Hezbollah. Building administrations have asked tenants to declare the names of displaced sheltering with them. Some have refused to take in people from the south.
The first strike hit the building's lower floors around 4 p.m. The Ramadan family were shocked but didn’t think the building was collapsing. Only Ramadan's wife, Jinan, ran for the stairs. A few moments passed, long enough for Ramadan’s son Achraf to bring his sister Julia a glass of water to calm her.
Then the second missile hit. The building swayed, then collapsed.
Ramadan fell off the couch, which along with a nearby cabinet protected him from the falling ceiling. Achraf, a fitness trainer and former soldier, took cover under a door frame. Julia fell to the floor.
For what seemed like two hours, the three communicated through the rubble. Ramadan said Julia was only two meters (yards) away, her voice faint but audible. He called for help using his mobile phone still in his hands.
When help came, Achraf got out first; then his father, about six hours after the strike. In the chaos, they thought Julia had been pulled out. But the rescuers returned to find the 28-year-old dead. Her mother died in the hospital from internal bleeding.
“I lost the cornerstone of the house: my wife, my partner and friend,” Ramadan said. “I lost my daughter Julia ... She was my joy, my smile, the future.”
They are buried in unmarked graves in a section of the Sidon cemetery dedicated to the Ain el Delb building victims.
Like in Gaza, there is concern that the number of civilian casualties is “quite high” given that the alleged military target is often unstated or relatively small, said Rich Weir, the senior conflict, crisis and arms researcher at Human Rights Watch.
He said there has been an “escalation in terms of the amount of damage ... the taking down of entire buildings in densely packed residential neighborhoods, which brings inherent risks to civilians.” Israel has also expanded the scope of its targets, hitting Hezbollah financial institutions, he said.
Ramadan was not surprised at the killing of so many people for one possible Hezbollah member. It has happened before, he said.
“We hear in the news an apartment was targeted. And people wonder who it was,” he said. “People don’t know. Israel knows.”
‘Worse than a coffin’ At the bottom of the building’s wreckage, Hecham al-Baba was trapped in pitch black darkness for four hours, squeezed with his legs bent under him. The falling door had broken two of his ribs. It was difficult to breathe. All he could think about was that he might lose his legs.
“There was no blood going to my legs,” he said. “I couldn’t feel them. I couldn’t move. I tried to stay strong. I don’t want to remember. It upsets me.”
Finally, he heard movement: people removing bricks, a bulldozer. He started screaming. His lungs and chest hurt. They called to him to shout louder. “I told them I can’t.”
Then through a hole, a beam of light flashed in the darkness. At the sight of him, a rescuer cried out, “What a way to be stuck! It’s worse than a coffin.”
It took another four hours before the rescuers pulled him out head-first through the floor beneath him, covered in dust and soot.
The entire rescue operation took more than 43 hours. The Health Ministry put the death toll at 45, but the civil defense chief for Sidon, Mohamed Arkadan, said first responders pulled 73 bodies from the rubble. Five bodies remain unaccounted for, he said.
Doctors told al-Baba his ribs will heal with time.
But not his pain.
He said he will wear black all his life to mourn his sister. Past conflicts never stopped him from returning to Lebanon to visit family. This time, it may be a while before he comes back.
“There will be no peace,” he said, thinking of his family tragedy and the wars in both Lebanon and Gaza. “No one will bring me justice. No one.”



Israel Launches ‘Large-scale Wave of Strikes against Iran Infrastructure,’ Hits Lebanon

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
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Israel Launches ‘Large-scale Wave of Strikes against Iran Infrastructure,’ Hits Lebanon

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

The Israeli military said it launched a wave of strikes on the Iranian capital Tehran on Thursday.

The army “has just begun a large-scale wave of strikes against infrastructure of the Iranian terror regime across Tehran," a military statement said.

Meanwhile, the Israeli military said it began new strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

An overnight Israeli drone strike targeted a vehicle on a coastal highway in southern Lebanon, killing three people, Lebanon’s state news agency said.

The highway connects the city of Tyre to Naqoura, a border town near Israel.

On Wednesday, the Israeli military warned residents to move north of the Litani River, which serves as a key buffer line with villages south of it lying closest to the Israeli border.

The number of people killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon in the four days since the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah reignited has risen to more than 70, with over 430 people wounded, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said Wednesday.

It is not clear how many of those killed in Lebanon were civilians, but the Health Ministry said Tuesday that they included seven children.


Lebanese State Media Says Israeli Strike Kills Hamas Official

Smoke rises from the city of Khiam after an Israeli bombing targeted one of its neighborhoods, coinciding with the incursion of tanks (AFP)
Smoke rises from the city of Khiam after an Israeli bombing targeted one of its neighborhoods, coinciding with the incursion of tanks (AFP)
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Lebanese State Media Says Israeli Strike Kills Hamas Official

Smoke rises from the city of Khiam after an Israeli bombing targeted one of its neighborhoods, coinciding with the incursion of tanks (AFP)
Smoke rises from the city of Khiam after an Israeli bombing targeted one of its neighborhoods, coinciding with the incursion of tanks (AFP)

Lebanese state media said an Israeli strike killed a Hamas official on Thursday, the first reported targeted killing of a member of the Palestinian militant group since US-Israeli strikes on Iran triggered regional war.

Wassim Atallah al-Ali and his wife were killed when an "enemy drone targeted their home" in Beddawi, a Palestinian refugee camp near Tripoli, in a pre-dawn strike, the National News Agency (NNA) reported, describing the man as a senior Hamas official.

The strike hit the area without prior warning and marked the northernmost strike so far in Lebanon.

Located about 85 kilometers (53 miles) north of Beirut and more than 180 kilometers (112 miles) from the Lebanese-Israeli border, Beddawi was targeted during the 2024 war between Israel and Hezbollah.
Despite a ceasefire reached in November 2024, the Israeli military said in July it struck a Hamas figure in the camp.


Lebanon’s Displaced Face Housing Crunch, Surging Rents, Municipal Curbs

A woman sits on the ground beside her belongings on Beirut’s seaside corniche (EPA)
A woman sits on the ground beside her belongings on Beirut’s seaside corniche (EPA)
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Lebanon’s Displaced Face Housing Crunch, Surging Rents, Municipal Curbs

A woman sits on the ground beside her belongings on Beirut’s seaside corniche (EPA)
A woman sits on the ground beside her belongings on Beirut’s seaside corniche (EPA)

As war erupted in Lebanon, scenes of displacement quickly returned to the streets. Roads filled with cars packed with families fleeing bombardment, while some displaced people spread out along the seaside corniche in Sidon and Beirut, waiting for shelter.

But the search for a roof has become an ordeal. Rental prices have surged to unprecedented levels, and available apartments are scarce, deepening a housing crisis that has forced many families to remain in their cars or on roadsides while they search for somewhere to stay.

In some areas, residents have refused to receive displaced families amid fears they could be targeted and anger at Hezbollah for engaging in the war again.

“As time passes, the chances of moving to safe housing are shrinking. There are not many options,” said Hassan Daoud.

“What is available does not suit us, or it is beyond our financial means,” he added, noting that some homes are too small for his family while others are far too expensive.

Daoud, a man in his thirties who fled on Monday from a village in the Bint Jbeil district, is still staying with his family of nine along the seaside corniche, living in their cars until they can secure suitable housing.

He said a woman asked for $2,000 to rent a semi-furnished apartment in the Barouk area of Mount Lebanon.

“Who knows how long we will stay there,” he said. “What we fear is that the war will drag on and we will be unable to pay rent for more than one month.”

Displaced families must now pay for many essentials they were unable to take with them when they fled. At the same time, their jobs and businesses have stopped, and their sources of income have dried up.

“We cannot afford such amounts,” Daoud said.

Multiple pressures

Like Daoud, thousands of displaced people have yet to find housing. For many, the immediate goal is simple: a roof to shelter their families.

But displacement carries heavy consequences, particularly as many people have yet to recover from the previous war.

Another form of hardship is faced by Haj Mustafa, who fled his village in Kafra in the Bint Jbeil district.

“It seems there is a municipal decision banning people from renting us homes simply because we are from the Shiite sect,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat, referring to measures taken by municipalities amid fears Hezbollah members could blend in among displaced families.

Mustafa described a long and exhausting journey.

“It lasted more than 25 hours. I felt dizzy many times and was extremely exhausted. I am 80 years old and can no longer endure such displacement. It is extremely bad.”

Speaking in a low voice, he added: “Perhaps what happened to us could have been avoided, I do not know. But we are not well. That is all I know.”

Several Lebanese municipalities have issued circulars requiring residents, property owners, investors and tenants to notify local authorities in writing before signing any rental contract or occupying residential apartments.

Officials say the measures aim to ensure administrative order and proper application of the law.

Rising rents

Crisis profiteers are also exploiting the growing demand for shelter, either by sharply raising rents or imposing strict conditions such as annual contracts or six months’ payment in advance.

Mona, displaced from the city of Tyre, said: “I thought $800 would provide suitable housing for my family of four. But we were surprised that this amount is not enough for a small two-room apartment without furniture.”

“Why are they doing this to us?” she told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“Being forced into the war has already exhausted us.”

“We are losing, and we expect many more losses in lives and livelihoods. On top of that, we face rejection from fellow Lebanese of other sects. Of course we cannot generalize, but we are treated harshly and judged simply for belonging to a Shiite environment. They want to punish us for what the party did.”

Some landlords demand full payment for a year or six months upfront, such as $7,800 in advance for six months instead of $1,300 monthly. The conditions effectively limit available homes to wealthier displaced families.

At the same time, many Lebanese who experienced previous displacement and have the financial means kept their rented homes as a precaution and moved into them as soon as the war began.

Shelter centers

Meanwhile, many families are still waiting for rooms in official shelter centers. Some facilities have yet to open, leaving large numbers sleeping on the ground outside schools while they wait.

Dozens of people forced open the doors of some schools on Tuesday evening and entered them.

Lebanese authorities have published a list of shelter centers for displaced people, but the delay in opening some facilities has drawn criticism.

Sources at the Ministry of Education told Asharq Al-Awsat that shelter centers are opened gradually based on need, adding that the ministry responds immediately to requests from the Ministry of Social Affairs to open new centers.

According to official figures from the Disaster Risk Management Unit, the total number of shelter centers reached 171 on Monday. The number of displaced people stood at 29,347, while 52 people had been killed and 154 injured.

Mohammad Shamseddine, a researcher at the International Information organization, said the Bekaa region has seen fewer displaced people this time.

“The numbers are lower than during the same period in the previous war, when they reached 420,000,” he said. “Residents of frontline villages have still not returned since then because they lost their homes and livelihoods and the conditions for return and life there have not been restored.”

The United Nations said Tuesday that at least 31,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon due to Israeli bombardment and air strikes across several areas, particularly in the south and Beirut’s southern suburbs.

UNHCR spokesperson Babar Baloch told a news conference in Geneva that large-scale displacement has been reported after Israel issued evacuation warnings to residents of more than 53 Lebanese villages and carried out intensive air strikes there.