A direct Israeli military strike on a primary healthcare center in the southern Lebanese village of Burj Qalawiyeh has resulted in the deaths of 17 medical personnel, according to statements from Lebanese health authorities on Saturday. The attack, which occurred late Friday in the Bint Jbeil district, claimed the lives of doctors, nurses, and paramedics performing critical medical duties.
Lebanon’s Health Ministry has formally accused Israel of systematically targeting emergency medical teams during rescue operations, reporting that 31 paramedics have been killed since hostilities began on March 2. The ministry’s statement condemned what it characterized as repeated attacks on healthcare infrastructure and personnel.
The Israeli military, through its Arabic-language spokesperson Avichay Adraee, countered these allegations by asserting that Hezbollah has been utilizing ambulances for military purposes. Adraee issued warnings that Israel would continue to target any medical facilities or vehicles believed to be supporting Hezbollah’s military operations.
This incident represents the most significant single loss of medical life since the conflict erupted following Hezbollah’s rocket attacks against Israel, which the group stated were in retaliation for the killing of Iran’s supreme leader. The ongoing violence has triggered massive displacement, with approximately one million people forced from their homes across southern Lebanon and parts of Beirut according to the Norwegian Refugee Council, affecting roughly 14% of Lebanon’s territory.
The humanitarian crisis continues to deepen with Lebanon’s Health Ministry reporting 826 fatalities, including 65 women and 106 children, and 2,009 wounded since the conflict’s inception. In a separate incident Friday night, a family of six including four children were killed in an airstrike on their home in Nabatieh.
In a significant escalation, Israeli forces destroyed a bridge over the Litani River, describing it as a “key crossing” for Hezbollah operations despite providing no concrete evidence. This marks the first acknowledged attack on Lebanese public infrastructure since the conflict began. Simultaneously, Israel distributed leaflets over Beirut threatening “Gaza-scale devastation” and further infrastructure attacks unless Hezbollah is disarmed, with Defense Minister Israel Katz warning that Lebanon’s government would “pay increasing costs through damage to infrastructure and loss of territory.”
