Desperation grows in search for survivors of Beirut airstrike
UNB
Publish: 23 Oct 2024, 11:45 AM
BEIRUT.
Oct 23 (AP/UNB) - Nearly 16 hours after an Israeli airstrike hit across the
street from Beirut's main public hospital, rescuers were still removing debris
Tuesday from the overcrowded slum area. An excavator was digging at one of the
destroyed buildings, picking out twisted metal and bricks in search for bodies.
Residents standing on
mounds of debris said an entire family remained missing under the rubble.
Mohammad Ibrahim, a
Sudanese national, came looking for his brother. "His mobile phone is
still ringing. We are trying to search for him," he said. "I don't
know if he is dead or alive."
Hours later, health
officials said five bodies had been recovered from under the rubble. At least
18 people were killed, including four children, and at least 60 wounded in the
strike that also caused damage across the street at the Rafik Hariri University
Hospital, the capital's main public medical facility.
Jihad Saadeh, director
of the Rafik Hariri Hospital, said the strike broke several glass windows and
the solar panels of the medical facility, which continued to operate despite
the damage and the panic. None of the staff was injured.
Saadeh said the hospital
received no warning of the impending strike, just a few meters (yards) across
the street. Neither did the residents of the slum area, where several buildings
were crammed and which houses several migrant workers as well as working class
Lebanese.
The Israeli military
said it struck a Hezbollah target, without elaborating. It added had not targeted
the hospital itself.
It was hard for rescue
equipment to reach the area of clustered settlements and dusty narrow roads.
Nizar, one of the
rescuers, said he had been at the site of the explosion since Monday night.
"It was too dark and there was so much panic," he said, giving only
his first name in line with the rescue team's regulations. "People didn't
understand yet what had happened."
The overcrowded slum was
covered in debris, furniture and remains of life poking out of the twisted metal
and broken bricks. Residents who survived the massive explosion were still in
shock, some still searching through the debris with their hands for their
relatives or what is left of their lives. Gunmen stood guard at the site. The
Lebanese Civil Defense said Tuesday five buildings were destroyed and 12
sustained severe damage. The dead included one Sudanese and at least one
Syrian.
"This is a very
crowded area; buildings are very close. The destruction is massive," Nizar
said, explaining that the scale of the damage made their rescue effort harder.
Across the street, the
hospital was still treating a few of the injured. The morgue had received 13
bodies.
Hussein al-Ali, a nurse
who was there when the attack happened, said it took him a few minutes to
realize it was not the hospital that was hit. Dust and smoke covered the
hospital lobby. The glass in the dialysis unit, the pharmacy and other rooms in
the hospital was shattered. The false roof fell over his and his colleagues'
heads.
"We were terrified.
This is a crime," said al-Ali. "It felt like judgement day."
It took only minutes for
the injured from across the street to start streaming in. Al-Ali said he had
little time to breathe or reassure his terrified colleagues and the rattled
patients.
"Staff and patients
thought the strike was here. We fled outside as the injured were coming
in," he said. And when he was done admitting the injured, "we came
out to carry our (killed) neighbors. They are our neighbors."
Ola Eid survived the
strike. She helped dig out her neighbors' children from under the rubble,
before realizing she herself was injured.
"The problem is we
didn't feel it. They didn't inform us. We heard they want to strike al-Sahel
hospital," said Eid, bandaged and still in shock sitting at the hospital
gate. Israel had hinted another hospital miles away could possibly be a target,
alleging it is housing tunnels used by the Hezbollah militant group.
Eid, an actor, said she
was playing with her neighbor's kids when the first explosion hit. It knocked
her to the floor and scattered the candy she was handing out to the kids. She
stood up, not believing she was still alive, to find her neighbor's kid soaked
in blood. One was killed immediately; the other remained in intensive care.
"I looked ahead and
saw the kids torn apart and hurt," she said. "The gas canisters were
on fire. I didn't know what to do - put out the fire or remove the kids."
End/UNB/AP/MB