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SIDON: A family sits with their belongings in the back of a truck as they wait in a traffic jam in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon on September 23, 2024.
SIDON: A family sits with their belongings in the back of a truck as they wait in a traffic jam in the southern Lebanese city of Sidon on September 23, 2024.

Zionist strikes send Lebanon into panic

Schools closed as thousands flee homes from bombings that killed more than 350

SIDON: Health workers in southern Lebanon scrambled to treat hundreds of people wounded on Monday, as families rushed to flee the deadliest Zionist strikes in nearly a year of cross-border clashes. “Wounded people are pouring in non-stop ... I don’t know how many have been wounded because the injured are lining the street outside the hospital,” said an employee of the Tebnin hospital in southern Lebanon, requesting anonymity citing security concerns.

The Zionist entity said its air strikes on southern and eastern Lebanon had targeted hundreds of Hezbollah sites, and it warned of more to come. Lebanon’s health ministry said the strikes had killed more than 350 people including 21 children, the highest single-day toll since Hezbollah and the Zionist entity began trading fire when the Gaza war erupted on October 7.

At a hospital near the southern city of Nabatiyeh, less than 15 kilometers (nine miles) from the southern Lebanese border, doctor Jamal Badran described “a disaster and a massacre”. “They struck near my house,” he told AFP by telephone. “I had just returned from the hospital, where there are many dead and wounded. “They bombed us while we were recovering wounded people” from a strike site, he added.

In the southern city of Sidon, an AFP correspondent saw traffic jams on the main highway to Beirut, as families fled the strikes in cars and vans. Some of the areas hit on Monday had largely been spared from the near-daily cross-border fire. The Zionist entity said earlier this month its focus was shifting northwards towards Lebanon. Monday’s strikes came after Hezbollah communications devices exploded last week in an attack blamed on the entity, and after a strike on south Beirut killed a top Hezbollah commander and dozens more people.

BEIRUT: A Lebanese man checks a message received on his mobile phone in Beirut on September 23, 2024, calling people to evacuate the areas where Hezbollah
BEIRUT: A Lebanese man checks a message received on his mobile phone in Beirut on September 23, 2024, calling people to evacuate the areas where Hezbollah "hides its weapons". — AFP photos

‘Sudden escalation’

Lebanese journalist Nazir Reda was trying to reach his hometown of Babliyeh, some 25 kilometers from the border, to pull his family, including his baby boy, away from the violence. “No one expected such a completely sudden escalation to reach even villages that were safe, like Babliyeh, and that had not been bombed in previous wars,” he said while stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic as he drove from Beirut.

He said he had left his children in the village because their school was supposed to reopen in a few days’ time, and he thought they would be safer than in Beirut’s southern suburbs, where he usually lives. “I had to rush south again and take the children to Beirut,” he told AFP, adding that the family would stay with friends in a Christian-majority neighborhood in Beirut.

“Everyone is heading (to Beirut) with their children and their belongings — it’s the first time we see such panic since 2006,” when the Zionist entity went to war in Lebanon. Bilal Kachmar, a disaster management official in the southern coastal city of Tyre, said roads were packed with people driving away from their towns and villages. Hundreds rushed to a school-turned-shelter in Tyre, with many others waiting on the streets with their belongings to see what would happen next, Kachmar told AFP.

Texts and calls

Lebanon’s education ministry said all educational institutions would shut for two days. In Nabatiyeh, teacher Adra Kanso said strikes hit “close to residential areas and a complex of schools” that had not yet opened for the new academic year.

In Beirut, several parents said their children’s schools and kindergartens had contacted them, to ask them to pick up their kids. Lebanon’s official National News Agency said people were receiving phone messages from the Zionist entity on their landlines, warning them to evacuate, with even Information Minister Ziad Makary’s office receiving a call.

Other people reported receiving mobile phone text messages with similar warnings from an unidentified sender. The reports came after the Zionist military told people in Lebanon to move away from Hezbollah targets and vowed to carry out more strikes, in the first such warning to people in Lebanon since the war in Gaza erupted. — AFP

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