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HomeWorldIsrael steps up Beirut strikes, vows to hit bridges in south

Israel steps up Beirut strikes, vows to hit bridges in south

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By Laila Bassam, Mohamed Azakir, Tom Perry and Khalil Ashawi
BEIRUT, March 18 (Reuters) – Israel stepped up airstrikes on Beirut on Wednesday, killing at least 12 people and destroying a 10-storey building near the city centre in the third week of its war with Hezbollah, Lebanese authorities said.

Indicating further escalation in southern Lebanon, the Israeli military said it would target bridges across the Litani River to prevent Hezbollah transferring fighters and weapons, and reiterated a warning for residents to leave the south.

The Hezbollah-Israel conflict has become the deadliest spillover of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran since the Iran-backed group fired at Israel in support of Tehran on March 2, with more than 900 people killed in Lebanon and 1 million displaced.

FOUR BUILDINGS STRUCK IN EIGHT HOURS

Strikes rattled Beirut through the night and into morning, lighting up the sky over the Hezbollah‑controlled southern suburbs, which have been heavily bombarded by Israel.

The escalation in central Beirut, where Israel targeted four buildings in eight hours, followed what Hezbollah described as a large rocket attack against Israel late on Tuesday. Some 100 rockets were fired, Lebanese security sources said.

The Israeli military said preventative strikes had blunted the Hezbollah attack, and that it had completed an overnight wave of strikes targeting Hezbollah infrastructure in Lebanon.

The airstrikes in Beirut hit buildings within walking distance of the downtown area that was rebuilt after the 1975-90 civil war and of the headquarters of the Lebanese government.

The targeted districts are historically mixed neighbourhoods where large numbers of Shi’ite Muslims live and Shi’ite Hezbollah and its ally the Amal Movement hold political sway.

Hezbollah’s al-Manar TV said one of its broadcasters, Mohammad Sherri, had been killed along with his wife in one of the strikes in the Zuqaq al-Blat neighbourhood.

ISRAEL SAYS IT TARGETED HEZBOLLAH’S FINANCIAL ARM

The Israeli military statement said it had “struck assets” of a Hezbollah-run financial institution, Al-Qard Al-Hassan, in Beirut, and that the Israeli navy had targeted Hezbollah militants in the city. It did not say exactly where.

Beirut resident Abu Khalil said he had helped people flee their homes in the Bachoura district after Israel’s military posted a warning on social media signalling it intended to hit the 10-storey building, before levelling it with a strike.

“It’s just an operation to hurt, to terrify people, to terrify children. What is there here?” Abu Khalil said.

The Israeli military, in its warning posted on social media before dawn, said it would act against what it said was a Hezbollah facility in the area. There were no reports of casualties in the Bachoura strike at around 5:30 a.m. (0330 GMT).

The Israeli military issued no warnings before the three other strikes, the first of which tore through several floors of a building in Zuqaq al-Blat at around 1:30 a.m., and two floors of a building in nearby Basta around the same time.

The fourth strike, around 8 a.m., destroyed a floor of a second building in Zuqaq al-Blat.

The Lebanese health ministry said the strikes killed 12 people and wounded 41.

Israel struck the Bachoura and Zuqaq al-Blat neighbourhoods last week.

No fatalities have been reported in Israel from Hezbollah rocket and drone attacks. The Israeli military says two of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon.

In southern Lebanon, an Israeli strike hit a petrol station and another killed a town council member, state media said.

Four people were killed in an airstrike on the city of Baalbek in eastern Lebanon. In the south, 10 people were killed in airstrikes in three different locations, the state news agency reported, citing the health ministry.

(Reporting by Laila Bassam, Tom Perry, Ahmed Kerdi, Mohamed Azakir and Maya Gebeily in Beirut; Steven Scheer in Jerusalem; Enas Alashray in Cairo; Jana Choukeir and Tala Ramadan in Dubai; Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Jamie Freed, Kevin Buckland, Michael Perry, Lincoln Feast and Ros Russell)

Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

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