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Israeli air strikes on Beirut leave at least six dead — health ministry

According to the ministry, 36 more were wounded

TUNIS, November 18. /TASS/. At least six people were killed and 36 more wounded following Israeli Air Force strikes on the central and western districts of the Lebanese capital of Beirut, the Ministry of Public Health of Lebanon stated on its Facebook account (banned in Russia due to its ownership by Meta designated as extremist).

According to the ministry’s statement, "the Israeli raid on the Ras al-Nabaa district [in central Beirut] left four people killed, including a woman, and 14 more sustained wounds, including 2 children."

The ministry added that two people were killed and 22 more wounded following a deadly attack of an Israeli unmanned aerial vehicle on the Mar Elias and Karakol el-Druze districts in the western part of Beirut.

Al Jazeera television channel reported on Sunday, citing sources in the Lebanese security service, that Hezbollah spokesman Mohammad Afif had been killed by an Israeli air raid on Beirut’s Ras al-Nabaa district. According to the television channel, Afif was inside the building housing the headquarters of the pro-Syrian Arab Socialist Baath Party. At least two strikes were delivered on this building.

Tensions erupted again in the Middle East on October 7, 2023, after militants from the Gaza Strip-based Palestinian group Hamas launched a surprise attack into Israeli territory, killing many Israeli kibbutz residents living near the Gaza border and abducting hundreds of Israelis. Israel declared a total blockade of the Gaza Strip and initiated bombardments of the enclave and some areas in Lebanon and Syria, as well as a ground operation against Hamas in the Palestinian enclave.

On September 23, Israel launched Operation Northern Arrows against the Lebanon-based Hezbollah Shia movement, carrying out massive airstrikes on its military targets. The Israeli army announced the start of a ground operation in the border areas of southern Lebanon in the early hours of October 1.