Lebanese worry nowhere is safe amid widespread Israeli bombing
BEIRUT — Fears grew across Lebanon on Monday after Israel launched a strike on a residential building in central Beirut, marking a fresh escalation in a devastating bombing campaign that local officials say has already killed more than 1,000 people. “There’s no safe place guaranteed in Lebanon,” said Jihan Kaisi, the executive director of the Union of Relief and Development Associations, an organization helping displaced people across the country. As many as 1 million people have been driven from their homes in the latest violence, according to Lebanon’s prime minister. “The Cola area is crowded with families, with displaced families who came to this area thinking it’s safe,” Kaisi told NBC News after the Israeli strike hit a building in the city’s densely populated district just a stone’s throw from downtown Beirut. “We were shocked this area was bombed,” she said of the strike, which appeared to be Israel’s first attack on the capital’s center since the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah. A Palestinian militant group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said early Monday that three of its members were killed in the strike in central Beirut, where humanitarian workers said many civilians had sought shelter, believing the capital’s center to be safe from Israel’s bombardments. Izdihar al Fouani, 40, told NBC News she’s afraid nowhere is secure for her and her family, who fled from the southern suburb of Dahieh to central Beirut. Meanwhile, in southern Lebanon, an Israeli official told NBC News that Israeli forces had begun launching small special forces operations ahead of a potential ground offensive. The official said the operations were designed to gather intelligence and probe Hezbollah’s positions, though they cautioned that the forays have been taking place for months and do not necessarily signal an imminent ground assault. Fadel Itani / AFP – Getty Images Israel says its campaign in Lebanon is aimed at ensuring the safe return and long-term security of communities in northern Israel who have been displaced from their homes during nearly a year of mounting hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group that has vowed to continue striking Israel until it ends its war in Gaza. Israel’s aerial campaign in Lebanon has killed more than 1,000 people, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed in an Israeli strike Friday, sending shock waves across the region, with Iran vowing revenge. Sleeping on the streets Meanwhile, as many as 1 million people have been displaced from their homes, Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati said, with growing numbers of families forced to create makeshift shelters on streets and beaches as images emerging from southern Lebanon show mounting destruction of areas once populated by civilians. Hassan Ammar / AP Fatima, 32, who delivered a baby just days ago, said she and her family had fled from the south to central Beirut over the weekend in hope of finding safety there. Nayef Fouani, who has, along with hundreds of others, been sheltering in the Azarieh commercial center in Beirut, said of having to abruptly flee from his home in the city’s southern suburbs: “Look at our situation. ‘No safe place’ Kaisi, the executive director of the Union of Relief and Development Associations, said humanitarian workers were “shocked” by the strike in Cola. Charlotte Gardiner / NBC Meanwhile, in southern Lebanon, where she is based, Kaisi said civilians displaced by Israeli airstrikes and sheltering in the city of Saida, or Sidon, were also terrified after a deadly airstrike in the area Sunday. The Israel Defense Forces did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strike Monday.Thousands of families, Kaisi said, had been sheltering in Saida under the belief that they were safe there, many taking refuge in overcrowded schools transformed into shelters while others had little choice but to sleep in the streets and in parking lots and school playgrounds. And she said she feared what might lie ahead for them if Israel’s bombing campaign does not end, with more people expressing fears that Lebanon could eventually become like Gaza, where more than 41,500 people have been killed during Israel’s nearly yearlong offensive in the enclave. “There’s talk that Lebanon might face the same situation,” she said. – This Summarize was created by Neural News AI (V1). Source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/lebanon-israel-beirut-hezbollah-bombing-nowhere-safe-rcna173216