Israeli strikes on Lebanon kill 226 health workers since October 7: WHO

AFP , Friday 22 Nov 2024

Israeli strikes on Lebanon have killed nearly 230 health workers since the start of Israel's war on Gaza in October last year, the World Health Organization said Friday.

Lebanon Red Cross
A rescuer from the Lebanese Red Cross looks on as people search the rubble of a building levelled in an Israeli strike in the village of Younine in eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. AFP

 

In total, the UN health agency said there had been 187 attacks on healthcare in Lebanon in the more than 13 months of Israeli aggression on Lebanon.

Between October 7, 2023 and November 18 this year, "we have 226 deaths and 199 injuries in total," Abdinasir Abubakar, the WHO representative in Lebanon, said via video link from Beirut.

He said "almost 70 percent" of these had occurred since Israel escalated its cross-border rocket fire with Hezbollah into an all-out war on Lebanon in September.

Saying this was "an extremely worrying pattern," he stressed that "depriving civilians of access to lifesaving care and targeting health providers is a breach of international humanitarian law".

Abubakar said "a hallmark of the conflict in Lebanon is how destructive it has been to health care", highlighting that 47 percent of Israeli attacks "have proven fatal to at least one health worker or patient" -- the highest percentage of any active conflict today.

By comparison, Abubakar said that only 13.3 percent of attacks on healthcare globally had fatal outcomes during the same period, pointing to data from a range of conflict situations, including Ukraine, Sudan and the occupied Palestinian territory.

He suggested the high percentage of fatal attacks on healthcare in Lebanon might be due to the fact that "more ambulances have been targeted" in Israeli strikes.

"And whenever the ambulance is targeted, actually, then you will have three, four or five paramedics ... killed".

The Israeli escalation has dealt a harsh blow to overall healthcare in Lebanon, which was already reeling from a string of dire crises in recent years.

The WHO warned that 15 of Lebanon's 153 hospitals have now ceased to operate or are only partially functioning.

Hanan Balkhy, WHO's regional director for the eastern Mediterranean region, stressed that "attacks on health care of this scale cripple a health system when those whose lives depend on it need it the most".

"Beyond the loss of life, the death of health workers is a loss of years of investment and a crucial resource to a fragile country going forward."

*This story was edited by Ahram Online.

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