Latest News

Six Lebanese doctors killed by Israeli attacks in 24 hours: Health Ministry

Lebanon's Health Ministry announced on Friday that six Lebanese Paramedics had been killed in two Israeli airstrikes on southern Lebanon over a 24-hour period. The ministry condemned the attacks, calling them violations of international law.

The health ministry of Lebanon reports that an Israeli strike in southern Lebanon, overnight on Thursday and Friday, killed four paramedics with the Islamic Health Association. The ministry reported that two medics of the Al-Rissala Scouts Association?in Deir Quanoun En-Nahr were killed by an Israeli strike on Friday morning.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to questions about the strikes.

The ministry released a video, which it claimed was shot in Deir Qanoun En-Nahr. It showed two men wearing yellow vests?on the roadside tending to someone. A flash and loud boom are heard when an ambulance approaches these two men. These same men then lie on the ground.

The buildings, trees and road map matched the archive images of the area. According to the health ministry, there were six deaths in Deir Quanoun En Nahr. This included two medics, a child from Syria, and other people. Airstrikes on the town earlier this week killed 14 people. This was the deadliest strike since last month's tenuous ceasefire.

Since March 2, when the Lebanese group Hezbollah opened fire on Israel, more than 3,100 people in Lebanon have died. According to the statistics released by the Health Ministry on Friday, 123?medics and more than 210 women were among those killed.

The international humanitarian law protects frontline responders and healthcare workers, as well as civil infrastructure such as healthcare centres.

According to the World Health Organization, Israeli airstrikes have damaged or completely shut down several hospitals in southern Lebanon.

According to the Health Ministry, on Thursday, an Israeli strike near the Tebnine Hospital, in southern Lebanon, damaged all three levels of the building, including the emergency room and intensive care unit. The hospital also suffered damage to its surgical ward, ambulances, and the outside parking lot. Reporting by Maya Gebeily, Catherine Cartier and Tansy Liu in Beirut; Eleanor Whalley and Rami Ayyub from Jerusalem; Editing by Chiara Rodriquez

(source: Reuters)