Lebanon paramedics risk deadly strikes to do their work

Lebanese army soldiers and police officers inspect a building that was targeted overnight by an Israeli air strike in Khalde, south of the Lebanese capital Beirut, on March 17, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 17 March 2026
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Lebanon paramedics risk deadly strikes to do their work

  • Repeated atacks on health care workers have become a source of fear and anxiety for many of them

BEIRUT: Youssef Assaf was in a Lebanese Red Cross ambulance when it was targeted by an Israeli strike near Tyre, in southern Lebanon. The 35-year-old paramedic died of his wounds two days later.
“I was called around 10:30 p.m. and told that he was wounded and in the hospital,” his wife, Jeanne d’Arc Boutros, said from northern Lebanon, where she had fled to a relative’s home.
“I knew my husband was strong and could endure. I did not react at all — I just kept praying and repeating in my heart that nothing bad would happen to him,” the 32-year-old schoolteacher said.
But Assaf died within two days. 
He was one of 38 Lebanese health care workers killed in Israeli strikes since the start of the current war on March 2, according to the Health Ministry.
The ministry said he died from wounds caused by an Israeli strike on their ambulance “as they were carrying out a rescue mission” after a strike.
Boutros said that when she heard the news of his death, “I don’t know what happened to me. I collapsed on the ground and was convulsing.”
“How can they wound or kill paramedics who are saving people? They are neither armed nor affiliated with any party,” the mother of three children, including a four-month-old girl, said.
The head of the Lebanese Red Cross, Georges Kettaneh, said that their teams operate in southern Lebanon only after notifying the Lebanese army and UN peacekeepers, and stressed the need to secure safe access for their paramedics on the ground.
He said the Red Cross had sent a letter to the Foreign Ministry to contact the UN “regarding the protection of medical teams” and securing safe access routes.
The repeated strikes on health care workers have become a source of fear and anxiety for many of them, including Mona Abou Zeid, 59, who runs a hospital in the Nabatieh area in southern Lebanon.
“The situation is very difficult ... There is continuous shelling,” she said.
“We are afraid for our paramedics who move around to transport the wounded,” she added.
The fears of health care workers intensified after 12 were killed on Saturday in an Israeli airstrike that targeted a medical center in the town of Bourj Qalawiyah in southern Lebanon.
Fatima Shoumar’s husband, a nurse, was among those killed.
She said those killed were not “military people ... these people were doctors, nurses, they help children.”
Ramzi Kaiss, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the Israeli military had not provided evidence that health care facilities or ambulances it attacked were being used for military purposes.
Kaiss said that if the Israelis have evidence that ambulances are being misused, they “must issue a warning to cease this misuse and only attack after this warning goes unheeded.”
Since March 2, the Health Ministry has said, there have been 53 attacks on paramedics, 13 on medical centers, and 30 on ambulances.
“The pattern we’re seeing today is eerily similar to what we saw unfold between October 2023 and November 2024,” Kaiss said, “a period during which over 220 health workers were killed.”
Nasser Ajram, a paramedic for a local NGO in Sidon, was gripped by anxiety despite his determination to continue his humanitarian mission.
“The day before yesterday, they struck a center. They killed doctors and nurses ... there are no more red lines,” he said.
Ajram, 57, has barely seen his family and grandchildren for two weeks.
“It seems there is no protection.”
For Boutros, the loss was irreparable, and her four-year-old son was still asking when his father would come home.
“I always dreamed about how we would grow old together. I would tell him how he would become an old man, and I would grow old too.
“He loved basketball, skiing, hunting, and the sea. He loved helping people ... he did a lot in his life, and then he left.”