Doctors warn that Israel is targeting Lebanon's health care system, as it did Gaza's
Last updated: April 6, 2026 | 15:44
A collapsed building is pictured following overnight Israeli bombardment in Nabatieh in southern Lebanon on Monday. AFP
People gather as an excavator clears rubble at the site of Sunday's Israeli strike on a building in Beirut's Jnah neighborhood, Lebanon, Monday, April 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
Debris of a damaged building is pictured following overnight Israeli strikes that targeted a neighbourhood in the southern Lebanese village of Burj Rahal on April 6, 2026. Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war in early March when Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of the Iranian supreme leader during US-Israeli strikes on February 28. (Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP)
Fafa Nur Aziila (kneeling 2nd L), the widow of fallen Indonesian soldier and UN peacekeeper Farizal Rhomadhon, cries over his grave as family members scatter flower petals during his funeral at the Giripeni Heroes' Cemetery in Kulon Progo, Yogyakarta, on April 5, 2026. Farizal was one of three Indonesian soldiers killed while serving with the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) in southern Lebanon, where Israel and Hezbollah have been fighting since Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war. (Photo by DEVI RAHMAN / AFP)
Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli strike in Beirut's southern suburbs. AFP
Two years ago, Dr Mohammed Ziara watched Israel ravage Gaza's health care system, shelling hospitals, striking ambulances and forcing patients to evacuate.
Now Ziara — along with many other medical workers, human rights groups and civilians - warns that the same scenario is unfolding in Lebanon.
Israel is pushing deep into the southern part of the country in its campaign against the Iran-backed group Hizbollah, a powerful militant force and political party that long has exercised de facto control over much of Lebanon’s Shiite community.
To describe its strategy in this war, the Israeli military has invoked the devastation it wrought in Gaza after the Hamas-led Oct.7, 2023, attacks. At one point last month, Israeli warplanes even dropped leaflets over Beirut warning that after "great success in Gaza, a new reality is coming to Lebanon, too.”
Mohammad Qubaisi, 53, with burn wounds from an Israeli airstrike, undergoes surgery by Dr Mohammed Ziara, left, and his team, at the Sidon Government Hospital. AP
"I've lived this before,” Ziara, a surgeon from Gaza City who specializes in burns, told The Associated Press on Thursday at the government hospital in the Lebanese port city of Sidon. "I cannot go back to Gaza now,” Ziara said. "But I can be here, in Lebanon.”
As it did with Hamas in Gaza, Israel accuses Hizbollah of hiding in and operating from civilian areas, and using hospitals and ambulances for military purposes. Israel has increasingly targeted Lebanese first responders and medical centers, forcing several hospitals to evacuate.
"I was besieged in a hospital,” Ziara said of his time at Gaza’s Shifa Hospital, where he worked before evacuating to Egypt with his family. He then joined the UK-based nonprofit Interburns, which sent him to Lebanon in 2024 to respond to the outbreak of the previous Israel-Hizbollah war. "I feel what these people feel.”
Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. AP
Since the war between Israel and Hizbollah reignited on March 2, Israeli airstrikes have killed at least 56 health professionals as of Monday, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry.
Israel has carried out more than 150 attacks against emergency medical workers and ambulances, and forced the closure of six hospitals and 49 health clinics through attacks or threats, the ministry reported.
In the latest attack that killed two paramedics and seriously wounded a third early on Monday, the ministry accused Israel of deliberately targeting a gathering of first responders on duty.
Ziara and his team from Interburns, which trains medics around the world in burn care, have set up the Lebanese public health system's first specialised burn unit - a critical resource in this crisis-stricken country where the war has killed 1,461 people and wounded 4,430, according to the ministry.
The Israeli military argues that Hizbollah’s use of medical facilities makes them legitimate military targets under international law. It does not offer evidence to support its claims.
Aida Alaq cries after checking the damage to her home following an Israeli strike in the village of Ain Saadeh, Lebanon. AP
Hizbollah denies conducting militant activities within civilian sites. Although the group's presence in residential areas is well-documented, there has been no independent verification of its use of hospitals for military purposes.
Based in the first city just north of Israel’s evacuation zone that covers nearly all southern Lebanon, Sidon Government Hospital takes more wounded people every day.
Kamal Fakih, 27, hates when people ask him what happened on March 17. It’s not that it pains him to recall the Israeli airstrike. It’s that he doesn’t remember anything at all. He regained consciousness a day later at the hospital in Sidon, his body burned and cut by shrapnel.
Lebanese medical staff treat a Sudanese man wounded in an Israeli strike in Jnah neighbourhood of Beirut. AFP
Once stabilised, Fakih tried to connect with the paramedic who pulled him and his friend Hassan from the burning rubble, hoping to hear his account and thank him for saving their lives. But by the time Fakih got his contact, Muhammad Tafili was already dead, killed with a fellow paramedic in an Israeli airstrike on ambulances in the southeastern village of Kfar Tebnit on March 28, according to Lebanon’s Health Ministry.
That same day, Israeli attacks killed seven other medics across four additional villages, the World Health Organisation said. Among the dead was a medic targeted while responding to an Israeli airstrike that killed three journalists working for pro-Hizbollah TV channels.
Footage of the incident shows two strikes in quick succession - the first hitting journalists in their car, the second crashing into paramedics as they rushed to the rescue.
Israel's military accused the two medics, and two of the three journalists killed, of being Hizbollah operatives. Its claim alarmed watchdogs that witnessed similar justifications for killing more than 260 journalists and 1,700 health workers in Gaza, according to figures from the United Nations humanitarian agency.
Relatives mourn after burying the shrouded body of a person killed in an Israeli strike in Tyre, Lebanon. Reuters
Although Lebanese medical workers and journalists were killed during the 2024 war with Hezbollah, "this time is different,” said Ramzi Kaiss, the Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch.
He pointed to a startling promise by Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz last week that Israel would flatten all the houses in southern Lebanon to protect its border towns from Hizbollah rockets "in accordance with the model used in Rafah and Beit Hanoun in Gaza” - two cities that Israel almost entirely razed in its offensive against Hamas.
"There’s a new kind of brazenness in declaring an intent to commit unlawful attacks,” Kaiss said. "It appears impunity has emboldened the Israeli military.”
Sweeping Israeli evacuation orders in recent weeks have sent over 1 million Lebanese flocking north. As the south came under heavy bombardment, clinics shuttered or suspended operations.
Nabih Berri Hospital was swamped by an influx of casualties. To make room, it evacuated dozens of patients.
Such transfers involve coordination with the Lebanese army, Health Ministry and UN peacekeeping force - a game of telephone, doctors say, that creates potentially life-threatening delays.
Admitting patients isn’t easy either; the Sidon burn unit must discharge a patient to free up a bed. But the referrals keep coming, straining a health system already crippled by economic collapse.
"The health system is on its knees,” Ziara said, as the hospital was plunged into darkness until backup generators kicked in 10 minutes later, a result of Lebanon’s long-running electricity crisis. "Now front-line hospitals are lacking staff and supplies. They're overwhelmed.”
Lebanese civilians say that Israeli bombs often come without warning and hit indiscriminately, feeding a growing feeling that Palestinians in Gaza know well - that nowhere is safe.
Mohammad Qubaisi, 53, said his neighborhood of Zuqaq al-Blat in central Beirut had not received Israeli evacuation guidance before March 18, when Israeli munitions slammed into his seventh-floor apartment.
Carrying his wife from the smoldering ruins, he shouted for his sons. His eldest, Adam, called to him. But he couldn’t hear Jad.
Qubaisi ran back into the skin-searing steam to search for his 15-year-old. When he woke up at the hospital hours later, his face raw with second-degree burns, he knew his son was gone. The Israeli military said it was targeting Hezbollah. Qubaisi pushed back.
"These are civilian buildings, not military targets. They hit us and we still don’t know why,” he said from the Sidon hospital. "We were sleeping safely in our home, and look what happened to us.”