Israel army launches ‘large-scale’ wave of strikes on south Beirut

Smoke and flames rise from buildings following an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP)
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Updated 12 March 2026
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Israel army launches ‘large-scale’ wave of strikes on south Beirut

  • Also on Wednesday, Israel carried out a strike in the heart of Beirut for a second time since Lebanon was dragged into the Middle East war

BEIRUT: The Israeli military said Wednesday that it had launched a new wave of strikes on Hezbollah targets in the southern Beirut suburbs, vowing to act with “great force” in the area.
The military said it had begun a “large-scale wave of strikes” on Hezbollah infrastructure in Dahiyeh, the Lebanese capital’s southern suburb, where the Iran-backed group holds sway.
In a separate statement on X, military spokesman Avichay Adraee said Israeli forces “will soon act with great force against (Hezbollah) facilities, interests, and military capabilities” in the area, after the military reported rocket fire from Hezbollah toward Israel “in the last few hours.”

Earlier on Wednesday, Israel carried out a strike in the heart of Beirut for a second time since Lebanon was dragged into the Middle East war, as the death toll in the country climbed past 630.
In New York, around 30 countries backing the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon voiced concern over the fighting in the country, which became a front in the wider conflict last week when Hezbollah attacked Israel in retaliation for the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Israel, which had kept up strikes in Lebanon even before the war despite a 2024 ceasefire with Iran-backed Hezbollah, has since launched air raids across the country and sent ground troops into border areas — an offensive that has killed 634 people, including 91 children, according to authorities.
Israel’s UN envoy Danny Danon said Wednesday that Israeli forces would continue to operate in Lebanon “as long (as) there will be a threat against us.”
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) said “the enemy targeted an apartment in the Aisha Bakkar area” in central Beirut, a densely populated neighborhood close to one of the city’s biggest shopping malls.
AFPTV’s live broadcast captured the sound of an air strike followed by a fireball erupting in an apartment in a multi-story residential building.
An AFP correspondent saw destroyed walls on the building’s seventh and eighth floors, with damaged cars nearby and security forces present at the scene.
When the strike hit, “I ran from room to room, pulled my wife and daughter out of the rooms and hid them behind a wall, then the second strike hit,” said Fawzi Asmar, owner of a bakery on the same street.
Samer Knio, a civil defense paramedic, said glass and debris fell on his team as they were evacuating casualties “but God protected us.”

‘Who do I blame?’

Lebanese authorities said Wednesday that about 816,000 people had been registered as displaced, with around 126,000 staying in collective shelters.
Some residents fear being caught in Israeli air raids targeting people sheltering nearby.
“We don’t know who they’re targeting. Maybe someone related to something, maybe not,” Amal Hisham, 46, said.
“Who do I blame? Who do I not blame?“
The health ministry announced an initial toll of four people wounded in the apartment strike — the second in central Beirut after Israel a seafront hotel days ago, saying it was targeting Iranian foreign operations officers.
Iran later said the raid killed four of its diplomats.
Senior UN officials and member states called on Wednesday for an end to fighting in Lebanon at a Security Council meeting in New York.
Jerome Bonnafont, the French ambassador to the United Nations, told reporters before the meeting that “we troop-contributing countries to the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, joined by several other member states, express our deep alarm at the escalation of hostilities in Lebanon.”


Syrian authorities find remains of five victims of Assad regime

Updated 58 min 48 sec ago
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Syrian authorities find remains of five victims of Assad regime

  • The remains of the individuals were scattered on open ground near a house in the village of Al-Qashla, near Manbij

LONDON: Syrian authorities completed the recovery of the remains of at least five individuals in eastern Aleppo province, believed to have died due to the brutal practices of the deposed Bashar Assad regime.

The Syrian Civil Defense found the remains of individuals scattered on open ground near a house in the village of Al-Qashla, near Manbij, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency.

They have been surveying and investigating the area since Monday, when the first report of human remains came through, in coordination with the National Authority for the Missing.

Authorities have found multiple mass graves in Syria since the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024.

Last week, authorities reported that the remains of 14 individuals were found in the Adra industrial area, northeast of Damascus, during excavation for mill foundations in the area.

According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, nearly 177,000 people have been forcibly disappeared in Syria since March 2011.