Israeli strike near Beirut hospital kills 4, including child, and wounds 24, Lebanese officials say

A child and three adults were killed and 24 others were wounded on Monday in an Israeli strike near Rafik Hariri University Hospital, the main public hospital in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, the national Health Ministry said in a statement.

It was unclear what the exact target of the strike was and there were few details available as of Monday evening.

But earlier Monday, prior to the attack, Israel said it planned to carry out more strikes in Lebanon against Al-Qard Al-Hassan, a Hezbollah-run financial institution that it targeted the night before and which it says uses customers’ deposits to finance attacks against Israel.

Another hospital, Al-Sahel Hospital in southern Beirut, was being evacuated in anticipation of such strikes after Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, an Israeli military spokesperson, said that Israeli intelligence had discovered a bunker belonging to late Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah now being used as a finance vault under the hospital and that it held millions of dollars of gold and cash. Hagari did not provide media with any specific evidence of the existence of the vault.

The director of the hospital, Fadi Alameh, a member of Lebanon’s parliament, told Reuters that the allegations Israel was making were false and slanderous, and he called on the Lebanese Army to visit and show it only had operating rooms, patients and a morgue.

At least 15 branches of Al-Qard Al-Hassan hit

At least 15 branches of Al-Qard Al-Hassan were hit late Sunday in the southern neighbourhoods of Beirut, across southern Lebanon and in the eastern Bekaa Valley, where Hezbollah has a strong presence. One strike flattened a nine-story building in Beirut with a branch inside it.

The Arabic language spokesman for the Israeli military, Avichay Adraee, said Hezbollah stores hundreds of millions of dollars in the branches of Al-Qard Al-Hassan and that the money is used to purchase arms and pay fighters. He did not provide evidence to back up the claims.

The strikes were aimed at preventing the group from rearming, Adraee said.

Red Cross vehicles parked in front of a hospital.
International Committee of the Red Cross vehicles park in front of the Rafik Hariri University Hospital in Beirut last week. An Israeli airstrike near the hospital killed four people Monday, according to Lebanese health authorities. (Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters)

The institution, which has more than 30 branches across Lebanon, tried to reassure customers, saying it had evacuated all branches and relocated gold and other deposits to safe areas.

Many customers are civilians unaffiliated with Hezbollah. Al-Qard Al-Hassan, which is sanctioned by the United States and Saudi Arabia, has long served as an alternative to Lebanon’s banks, which have imposed restrictions since a severe financial crisis that began in 2019.

Hagari, the Israeli military spokesperson, alleged Iran funds Hezbollah by sending cash and gold to the Iranian Embassy in Beirut.

Israeli strike in Syria kills 2

Hagari said Israeli strikes in Beirut in early October and in Syria on Monday had also killed people responsible for transferring money between Iran and Hezbollah. Syrian state media said an Israeli airstrike Monday hit a car in the capital of Damascus, killing two people and wounding three.

A woman and a child sit on the hood of a car among a crowd of people.
People wait outside the building, as members of security forces attempt to evict displaced people from an old hotel in the Hamra neighbourhood of Beirut on Monday. Over a million people have had to flee their homes in recent weeks as Israel and Hezbollah continue to launch attacks across the Lebanon-Israel border. (Yara Nardi/Reuters)

Israeli airstrikes killed 17 people in Lebanon on Monday before the Rafik Hariri strike, including four first responders, according to the country’s Health Ministry.

Israeli ground forces invaded Lebanon earlier this month. The military said it aims to push Hezbollah out of southern Lebanon so that Israelis living on the other side of the Lebanon-Israel border can return to their homes after more than a year of cross-border rocket and drone attacks.

Israeli airstrikes have pounded large areas of Lebanon for weeks, forcing over a million people to flee their homes.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry said on Monday that the death toll since Israel’s offensive began had risen to 2,483, with 11,628 injured. Fifty-nine people have been killed in northern Israel and the occupied Golan Heights over the same period, say Israeli authorities.