WHO Chief Slams "Assault" on Lebanon Healthcare; 14 Medical Workers Killed

The WHO Director-General has confirmed the deaths of 14 health workers in southern Lebanon following strikes on medical facilities. The attacks are part of a verified pattern of 27 assaults on healthcare in the country since early March, resulting in dozens of casualties. Lebanon's Health Ministry condemned the violence as a breach of international humanitarian law that protects medical personnel. The healthcare strikes coincide with intense ground and aerial combat between Hezbollah and Israeli forces along the border.

Key Points: WHO Condemns Attacks on Lebanon Healthcare, 14 Workers Dead

  • 14 medical workers killed in strikes
  • WHO verifies 27 attacks on healthcare since March 2
  • Lebanon's Health Ministry condemns violations of international law
  • Escalation follows Hezbollah's rocket launch ending ceasefire
2 min read

WHO chief condemns "ongoing assault on Lebanon's healthcare system"; 14 medical workers killed

WHO chief Tedros confirms 14 health workers killed in Lebanon strikes, condemning ongoing assault on the medical system amid escalating crisis.

"highlight the ongoing assault on Lebanon's healthcare system - Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus"

Geneva, March 15

The Director-General of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has confirmed the deaths of 14 health workers in southern Lebanon describing the events as a "tragic development in the escalating Middle East crisis."

In a statement posted on X on Saturday, the WHO chief revealed that 12 medical staff members, including doctors, paramedics, and nurses, were killed during a strike on the Bourj Qalaouiyeh primary healthcare centre late on Friday night.

Lebanon's Health Ministry confirmed the victims were on duty at the facility, which forms a key part of the nation's primary healthcare network, when the strike occurred.

According to the Director-General, this fatal incident followed another attack just hours earlier, where "two paramedics lost their lives in attacks on a health facility in Al Sowana."

Search and rescue teams have continued their efforts to locate missing persons at the sites, while the ministry noted that at least one additional health worker was injured in the Bourj Qalaouiyeh strike.

Ghebreyesus emphasised that these latest casualties are part of a broader pattern, stating that these incidents "highlight the ongoing assault on Lebanon's healthcare system, which is crucial for the populations it serves."

Condemning the violence, the ministry asserted that such actions "contradict international humanitarian law," as medical personnel "should never be attacked or militarised."

The scale of the crisis is reflected in WHO data, which shows that since March 2, the organisation has verified 27 attacks on healthcare in Lebanon, resulting in 30 deaths and 35 injuries.

The strike on Bourj Qalaouiyeh was part of a broader wave of Israeli attacks early Saturday that, according to Lebanon's National News Agency (NNA), resulted in at least 20 deaths across the country.

This intensification of strikes coincides with fierce ground combat between Hezbollah fighters and Israeli forces along the Maroun al-Ras, Bint Jbeil, and Aita al-Shaab axes.

Hezbollah's military wing, the Islamic Resistance, announced it had carried out various operations, including rocket and suicide drone strikes on Israeli positions in the Ya'ara settlement and Khiam.

The current escalation follows Hezbollah's initial rocket launch on 2 March, the first since the November 2024 ceasefire. This move has triggered sustained Israeli airstrikes across southern and eastern Lebanon, as well as Beirut's southern suburbs.

In light of these events, Ghebreyesus called for "urgent action" to de-escalate the crisis and protect the health of people throughout the region, adding that "peace is the best medicine."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Very tragic news. While the WHO chief is right to condemn this, we must also ask why Hezbollah is operating from civilian areas, putting hospitals and clinics at risk. The cycle of violence needs to end, and it starts with non-state actors not using populated zones as shields.
A
Aman W
"Peace is the best medicine." Truer words have never been spoken. As an Indian, we know the cost of conflict on our borders. Innocent lives, especially those trying to save others, should never be the price paid for geopolitical games. The international community must act.
S
Sarah B
27 attacks on healthcare in just over two weeks? The numbers are staggering. This isn't just a "tragic development," it's a systematic breakdown of the most basic human decency. My heart goes out to all the medical staff working in impossible conditions.
V
Vikram M
It's a grim reminder that conflicts don't stay contained. The entire region's stability is at stake. India has a significant stake in Middle East peace, both for our diaspora and energy security. Our diplomacy should push harder for an immediate ceasefire.
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, while the condemnation is necessary, the WHO statement feels like it's only stating the obvious after the fact. Where is the proactive, on-ground protection for these workers? We need more than statements; we need enforceable safe corridors and guarantees.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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