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Fourteen Killed in Israeli Airstrike Near Beirut Hospital
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According to the articles, an Israeli airstrike occurred near the Rafik Hariri university hospital in Beirut, Lebanon. The attack resulted in the deaths of at least 13 people, including four children, and injured 60 others. The Israeli military claims that the strike was intended to target a Hezbollah site, but not the hospital itself.
In the coming days, we will reveal how Iran funds Hezbollah's terror activities by using civilian institutions, associations, and NGOs that act as fronts for terrorism.
Al-Qard al-Hassan is implicated in the financing of Hezbollah's terrorist operations, particularly buying combat equipment and paying the salaries of the group's military branch.
Israel is too small to be able to attack Iran, although it may carry out a desperate, limited, and small attack to say it has retaliated, but it will definitely not carry out an offensive [strike] similar to ours.
Under the laws of war, branches of financial institutions are civilian objects unless they are being used for military purposes. Therefore, these attacks likely constitute a direct attack on civilian objects.
On the issue of captives currently held by the enemy, I say: I know that the enemy is not committed to the ethics of war and international conventions but it bears the responsibility of preserving the lives of the captives.
Israel wants to invert Hezbollah's rhetoric, which has long painted the Hebrew State as a fragile 'cobweb'.
Lebanon's banks adopted capital controls and people could no longer withdraw their money.
At the same time, the economy became a lot more 'cash-based', favouring Hezbollah, which is active in many illicit and informal economic networks. But when you go deposit your gold with Al-Qard al-Hassan, you can get cash right away.
In addition, the Lebanese no longer have confidence in their banking system, where withdrawing their money has become very complicated.
Since the financial crisis, its use has diversified, with a lot of consumer credit for Lebanese who can no longer afford to pay for their shopping or their children's schooling.
In the beginning, Al-Qard al-Hassan proposed zero-interest loans allowing borrowers to launch small economic activities such as paying for training or buying sewing machines.
The idea is to destroy all of Hezbollah's institutions.
Israel-Lebanese Hezbollah Conflict
- Israel strikes southern Beirut for the second time in a week
- Hezbollah Vows to Maintain Arms Amid Israeli Strikes in Southern Lebanon
- Israel strikes southern Beirut for the first time since November ceasefire
sources
- 1.The Guardian
- 2.The Times of India
- 3.Le Monde
- 4.The New York Times
- 5.The Washington Post
- 6.France 24
- 7.Reuters
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Israel-Palestine Conflict
- 3.British Foreign Policy
- 4.Israel Foreign Policy
- 5.Israel under Benjamin Netanyahu
- 6.2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel
- 7.Iran Foreign Policy
- 8.Ethnic tensions
- 9.French Foreign Policy
- 10.Israel-Lebanese Hezbollah Conflict
- 11.Espionage
- 12.Italian Foreign Policy
countries
- 1.Belgium
- 2.Egypt
- 3.United Kingdom
- 4.Israel
- 5.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 6.Lebanon
- 7.Palestine, State of
- 8.Saudi Arabia
- 9.Ukraine
- 10.United States
organizations
- 1.Hezbollah
- 2.Al-Qard al-Hasan
- 3.Shia
- 4.Iranian Revolutionary Guards
- 5.Lebanese Ministry of Health
- 6.Royal Military Academy
- 7.British Home Office
- 8.Israel Defense Forces
- 9.Le Commerce du Levant
- 10.Rafik Hariri University Hospital
- 11.UN Human Rights Council
- 12.University of Lausanne
persons
- 1.Aurélie Daher
- 2.Rafik Hariri
- 3.Avichay Adraee
- 4.Daniel Hagari
- 5.Jihad Saadeh
- 6.Joseph Daher
- 7.Philip Smyth
- 8.Adel Mansour
- 9.Amos Hochstein
- 10.Angela Rayner
- 11.Anthony Blinken
- 12.Didier Leroy