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Targeted assassination of Father Pierre Al-Rai in Qalaya (Lebanon)

Lebanon, South Lebanon, Qlayaa 09 March, 2026
On March 9, 2026, Israeli forces shelled the village of Qalaya in the Marjayoun district, killing the priest of the Christian parish, Father Pierre Al-Rai and injuring at least 4 of residents. The shelling hit a house located in the eastern part of the village, a Christian location considered relatively safe until now. The mayor of Qlayaa, Hanna Daher, stated that the inhabitants could not explain the reasons for the attack. “We don't know why our village was bombed. The target is unclear. Qlayaa is a safe locality”, the mayor said. “The affected house is located at the east end of the village. We first heard an explosion and then the inhabitants saw smoke rising from a house to the east. Everyone rushed to the place”. The mayor said rescuers found several injured people inside the building. “When we arrived we found that the house had been hit by an artillery shell and that there were injuries inside”, he explained. “While we were trying to evacuate people, a second bullet exploded in the house. We narrowly avoided a massacre, because there were many of us on site”. **Double Tap:** Lebanese news reports stated that an Israeli Merkava tank hit a house in Qlayaa twice. The first strike wounded the owner and his wife. Father al-Rahi and other neighbors rushed to the scene to help when the tank fired a second time. Father al-Rahi was wounded from the strike and later died from his injuries. 4 other Lebanese civilians were also injured in the attack. **A terror attack in respons of the earlier public statement of the priest:** Father Pierre al-Rahi, also known by his French name Pierre el-Raï, had earlier refused, along with other priests, to obey an order by the Israeli military to evacuate the Christian village of Qlayaa, a Maronite village of some 8,000 inhabitants in the Marjayoun district, a few miles from the Israeli border. “We are forced to stay despite the danger, when we defend our land, and we do so peacefully. None of us carries weapons. All of us carry peace and goodness and love,” Father al-Rahi told the France24 television channel on the steps of his church in Qlayaa March 8, a day before his death, while tens of thousands of Lebanese civilians have already fled their homes fearing further violence in the Marjayoun district. **Israeli Army spin:** On Tuesday, the IDF confirmed that tanks fired at suspected terrorists attempting to enter a house near where IDF soldiers were operating in southern Lebanon, but the military's statement did not directly link the incident with the shell fire that caused Raei's fatal injuries. **Qlayaa’s Mayor Hanna Daher statement to AsiaNews:** “They say there were fighters in the house, but that’s not true. These are lies, inside, there were only the residents of the house and people from the village who came to help the wounded.” **Pope Leo XIV statement:** Pope Leo XIV expressed “profound sorrow for all the victims of the bombings in the Middle East over the last few days — for the many innocent people, including many children, and for those who were providing them with aid, such as Father Pierre El-Rahi, a Maronite priest killed this afternoon in Qlayaa,” the Vatican’s Telegram channel said. The message posted by Holy See Press on Telegram said Pope Leo “is following the situation with concern and prays that all hostilities will cease as soon as possible.” **The French charity L’Oeuvre d’Orient statement:** “L’Oeuvre d’Orient condemns in the strongest possible terms these acts of war, which aim to destabilize all of Lebanon and kill innocent civilians. The death of a priest who refused to leave his parish is yet another escalation of senseless violence. L’Oeuvre d’Orient also denounces the risk of annexation and the disappearance of villages south of the Litani River, particularly historic Christian villages,” **David Azulay head of Metula settlement** Israeli Activist B.M. reports: *"The audacity: Four days after talking on Israeli radio about the need to "destroy and wipe out" South Lebanon, the head of Metula settlement, David Azulay, issues a statement of condolences, in Hebrew and Arabic, for Pierre al-Rahi, the Lebanese priest who was murdered by Israel on Monday. The village of Al-Qlayaa, where al-Rahi was murdered, is located 5 kilometers from Metula. Some Lebanese Christians originally from Al-Qlayaa, who used to be part of Israel's pre-2000 collaborator militia, the South Lebanon Army, now reside in Metula."* **Statement of Fr. Toufic Bou Merhi, Latin-rite parish priest in Tyre and Deirmimas:** Speaking to Vatican News, he said the 50-year-old Fr. El-Rahi was a true pastor for the Christians of his parish. Despite many Israeli evacuation orders for the area, Fr. El-Rahi remained to serve his parishioners. While the parish is mourning the death of Fr. El-Rahi and are now very afraid, even as the house of another priest was directly attacked: *“Up to now, people haven't wanted to leave their homes in Christian villages, but in this situation, everything has changed. Leaving home means living on the streets or trying to rent another place, but people can't afford it, especially given the country's already dire economic situation."* Other [source](https://www.lebanondebate.com/article/801170-القليعة-تنزف-استشهاد-كاهن-البلدة-بالقصف-الإسرائيلي)

Israeli artillery shelling on displacement tents in Al Nuseirat R.C.

Gaza, Nuseirat, Central Gaza 09 March, 2026
At least 3 martyred
On March 9, a few minutes after midnight, Israeli strikes hit tents sheltering displaced people in the Nuseirat refugee camp, in Al-Sawariha, central Gaza, killing three women, including a child and a journalist, and injuring more than 10 others. **Palestinian Center for Human rights investigation:** "According to information collected by PCHR’s field researchers, Israeli artillery positioned east of central Gaza Strip fired several shells between 00:00 and 00:05 on Monday, 9 March 2026. The shells landed in al-Sawahrah area, southwest of al-Nusseirat refugee camp, where the tents of displaced families are densely packed. As a result, Amal Hammad Ahmed Shamali (46), a journalist and Qatar Radio correspondent, was killed after a piece of shrapnel struck her head, causing a fatal laceration. Five other members of her family were also injured, including three in serious condition, when their tent was directly hit. This attack also resulted in the killing of Salsabeel Anwar Mahmoud Farraj (11), who was asleep in her tent when a piece of shrapnel struck her head. Two other members of her family were injured, including one who sustained serious injuries. Moreover, the attack killed Nour Saleh Mohammed al-Shalalfah (16) after she sustained a shrapnel wound to the head that caused a fatal laceration. Meanwhile, three other members of her family were injured, including two who sustained serious injuries. The shelling also injured several other people inside their tents in Abu Shammas Displacement Camp, in addition to causing severe damage to tents in the same location. Anwar Mahmoud Mohammed Farraj (36) told PCHR’s field researcher that he was sleeping with his wife and two children in their tent in Abu Shammas Displacement Camp, in the al-Sawahrah area, southwest of al-Nusseirat refugee camp, where they had been living for nearly two years. He stated that they heard two successive explosions in the area. As a result, his wife, Saloum ‘Abdel Rahman Mohammed Farraj (36), was injured by a piece of shrapnel in her hand, while their six-month-old child, Salamah, sustained a shrapnel wound to the head while sleeping in his mother’s arms. His 11-year-old daughter, Salsabeel, also sustained a severe laceration to the head caused by shrapnel. He added that shrapnel scattered throughout the camp and struck many tents, prompting distress calls across the area. The shelling resulted in the killing and injury of several people. He further stated that approximately an hour later, ambulances arrived at the scene, and his daughter Salsabeel was evacuated to al-‘Awda Hospital in al-Nusseirat refugee camp. Doctors there announced that she had died from her injuries, while his wife and son are still receiving treatment. Nesmah ‘Adnan Soliman Abu Shallouf (22) told PCHR’s field researcher that she heard about five successive explosions within five minutes, scattering shrapnel over the tents in the area. She added that seconds later she heard the screams of her 17-year-old brother, Mohammed, calling for help after his wife, Nour Saleh Mohammed al-Shalalfah (16), was wounded. The couple had been married for only about two months. A piece of shrapnel penetrated their tent and caused a severe laceration to her head, killing her. Moreover, the family of journalist Amal Hammad Ahmed Shamali stated that she was sleeping with her three children inside their tent when one of the shells landed near it, striking her in the head with shrapnel. The shell also injured her three children and other members of her family who were staying in nearby tents, while the tent was completely destroyed by the explosion." **Names of the martyrs:** 1) Amal Mohammed Shamali, 46, journalist 2) Nour Saleh Al-Shallafah, 30 3) Salsabeel Anwar Faraj, 12

3 death in a Pogrom in Abu Falah

West Bank, Ramallah, Khirbet Abu Falah 08 March, 2026
At least 3 martyred
On March 8, 2026, three Palestinians were killed and five others injured early Sunday during a brutal attack by Israeli colonists on the village of Abu Falah, east of Ramallah, followed by an Israeli military raid on the village. At 02:20, a group of masked settlers, protected by the occupation forces, attacked the village of Khirbet Abu Falah, and opened fire on the citizens, and the Israeli forces also intervened and fired live and rubber-coated metal bullets, stun grenades, and tear gas towards the citizens, which led to the death of 3 citizens (one of them as a result of inhaling tear gas), 4 others were injured. The two Hamayel victims were killed while residents confronted settlers who attacked the village. Israeli forces later stormed the area and fired tear gas canisters to disperse residents responding to the attack. According to Haaretz, "the masked Israeli settlers raided the village around 2:00 A.M., some of them filmed carrying clubs. Village residents then arrived to try to drive them away. Israeli soldiers reached the scene about 40 minutes later, the reports said, and a security source said the military is investigating the incident. Footage from the village shows tear gas being fired from a military vehicle. Seven people were also evacuated from the scene with injuries, including four with gunshot wounds, according to the Health Ministry in Ramallah." **Names of the martyrs:** 1) Thaer Awad Muhammad Ibrahim Hamayel, 24, 2) Farea Jawdat Hamayel, 57, both of whom were shot in the head. 3) Mohammad Hasan Murara, 55, who died after inhaling tear gas fired by Israeli forces during the raid on the village. He reportedly arrived at the hospital in cardiac arrest. **Other casulaties:** According to medical sources, five other residents sustained live-fire injuries, including three in the head, one in the pelvis, and another in the shoulder with the bullet exiting from the neck. The 4 wounded as a result of gunfire by settlers while they were attacking the village of Khirbet Abu Falah are: Moaz Qassam Al-Khatib, Jihad Hamid Marra, Zaid Salim Turki Hamayel, and Fadi Hani Muhammad Nazzal.

Assassination of Amir Muhammad Shanaran killed by Luria Luski in Wadi al-Rakhim

West Bank, Al-Khalil/Hebron, Wadi a-Rakhim, Susiya 07 March, 2026
At least 1 martyred
On the afternoon of March 7, an Israeli settler known to local residents opened fire on Palestinians in Khirbet Wadi al-Rakheem in Masafer Yatta, killing Amir Mohammad Shanaran and critically injuring his brother. According to medical sources and local anti-settlement activist Osama Makhamreh, Amir Mohammad Shanaran (28) was shot in the neck and killed, while his brother Khaled Mohammad Shanaran (33) was shot with live ammunition and hospitalized in critical condition. Witnesses said the brothers were near their home when armed settlers from the illegal settlement of Susya opened fire on them. ## **Casualties:** Martyr: 1) Amir Mohammad Shanaran (28) Severly injured: 2) Khaled Mohammad Shanaran (33) During the same attack, several members of the Shanaran family were injured while attempting to confront the settlers. 1) The brothers’ father was severely beaten, suffering head injuries and bruises. 2) Their aunt sustained a fractured leg. 3) Their uncle and two cousins were also beaten, leaving them with multiple bruises. In total, five family members were hospitalized after severe physical assaults during the attack. ## **Israeli Army statement:** The Israeli military said the shooter was a reservist soldier who arrived after reports of clashes between settlers and Palestinians. Israeli Military Police said a preliminary investigation had found that the shooter was a reservist soldier who arrived on the scene after being alerted to the confrontations between Palestinians and settlers. According to the IDF, troops and police officers were dispatched to a Palestinian village in the Masafer Yatta area “following a report of a violent confrontation between Israeli civilians and several Palestinians, in which several individuals were injured.” Military police opened an investigation into the incident, the findings of which will be submitted to the Military Advocate General for review, the IDF said. The Israel Police also launched an investigation and collected findings at the scene. ## **Investigation of the Naboth's Vineyard @nabothVin org:** In the Palestinian village of Susya, last Saturday (7 March 2026), tragedy struck. Amir Muhammad Shanran was shot and killed, and his brother Khaled critically wounded. What happened that day is only the latest chapter in a story that began nearly 30 years ago : the perpetrators belong to the Luski family, settlers living in an illegal outpost at the archaeological site known as Ancient Susya. The outpost was established decades ago on land expropriated by the Israeli state in 1986. Although demolition orders were issued, they were never enforced. Over the years, the family received state support—including a mortgage from the WZO Settlement Division intended for carpentry and livestock—allowing them to expand their presence. Originally sheep farmers, the Luskis eventually moved into cattle ranching, building an illegal cowshed near their home. The herd routinely trespasses onto Palestinian fields, destroying crops. On Saturday, March 7, 2026, the Luki family drove their cattle more than a kilometer into Shanran farmland, sparking a confrontation. When the Shanaran brothers tried to drive the cows away, Luria Luski, armed with a weapon supplied by the Israeli army, opened fire. The video footage shows Amir lying motionless, while the cows continued grazing calmly nearby—a stark contrast to the violence unfolding. Violence runs in the family. Luria’s father, Gadi Luski, and brother, Shem Tov Luski, have long records of attacks on Palestinians, including incidents so severe they occasionally led to prosecution. Yet accountability remains rare. This killing is not an isolated event. In the same week, four other Palestinians were shot by settlers in nearby villages. Experience shows that perpetrators rarely face consequences—even when attacks are recorded on video. The IDF’s response to the Shanran killing illustrates how normalized such violence has become. Their statement described the shooter as “an IDF reservist who arrived following a report of an assault” and noted that two Palestinians were hit, with one dying from his wounds. In the West Bank today, under a government that often turns a blind eye, any Israeli holding a weapon has, in effect, a license to kill Palestinians. And in Susya, decades of state-backed settlement expansion and unchecked settler violence have made that deadly reality painfully clear. ## **Testimonies gathered by B'tselem field investigator:** B’Tselem field researchers Manal Ja’bari and Nasser Nawaj’ah collected testimonies from several witnesses on 9 March 2026: **Muhammad Shinaran, 57, a father of 10 including Amir, related:** Members of the Shinaran family demanding a settler remove the cattle from their land at the beginning of the incident. From video footage courtesy of the family Members of the Shinaran family demanding a settler remove the cattle from their land at the beginning of the incident. From video footage courtesy of the family I live with my wife Sumayah, 57, and two of our sons, Khaldun, 24, and Hani, 22, in Khirbet Wadi a-Rakhim. Our three married sons – Amir, Khaled and Ayman – live nearby with their families. My brothers also live here with their families. I work as a farmer. I’ve been living on this land since I was born. It was passed down to us from our parents and grandparents. Over the years, we have suffered repeated attacks by settlers on our land and our families, but since the events of 7 October, their attacks have become more violent and brutal. The settlement of Susiya was established about two kilometers from our homes and land. Then, after 7 October, settlers set up several new outposts in the area, only about 400 meters from our homes. On Saturday, 7 March 2026, at around 4:00 P.M., after finishing the evening prayer, I left the mosque with my sons and brothers. On our way home, we heard my grandchildren shouting at settlers who were grazing their cows on our planted fields, about 200 meters from the house. I saw four settlers – two boys aged about 14-16, a man in his 50s, and the settler “Nahman,” who has set up outposts in the area and whom we know from previous incidents. They were grazing about 15 heads of cattle in our wheat and barley fields. The moment the settler grabbed Muhammad Shinaran’s phone to prevent the attack from being filmed. From video footage courtesy of the family The moment the settler grabbed Muhammad Shinaran’s phone to prevent the attack from being filmed. From video footage courtesy of the family I shouted at them, too, but they ignored us and refused to leave. I went towards them with my brother Hussein, 49, his son Muhammad, 24, and our nephew Hareth, 18. The settlers were holding clubs and sticks. We spoke to them calmly and asked them to stop grazing the cattle on our land. I documented what was happening on my phone, so they wouldn’t accuse us of attacking them or doing anything violent afterwards. The settler Nahman snatched the phone from me, threw it on the ground and stomped on it until it broke. They refused to leave and continued grazing the cattle on our land. I was holding an irrigation pipe, and Hussein and Hareth were holding sticks we use for herding. We tried to get the settlers and cattle to move away by ourselves, and then the settlers attacked us, swinging clubs. Nahman punched me hard with brass knuckles in my left eye. I felt sharp pain and started bleeding above my eyebrow. We decided to leave and head home. Khaled Shinaran lying wounded on the ground after being shot. From video footage courtesy of the family Khaled Shinaran lying wounded on the ground after being shot. From video footage courtesy of the family We had only taken a few steps when an ATV drove up carrying two settlers – one in a military uniform with a rifle, whom we know as Luria (Luria Luski), and the other, whom we know as Shem Tov (Shem Tov Luski), in civilian clothes. As soon as they arrived, Nahman said to them: “Kill them all.” The armed settler fired a shot in the air. At the same time, Nahman beat me with a club on my head and legs, and the others attacked my brother Hussein and Hareth. My son Amir arrived and saw Nahman beating me. Amir shouted at him, but the armed settler shot him from about five meters away, hitting him in the neck. Amir fell to the ground, bleeding heavily. My son Khaled and my daughter-in-law Hajar, Ayman’s wife, also arrived. The settler fired again and the bullet hit Khaled – it went through his right arm and lodged in his abdomen. Hajar screamed hysterically and tried to film what was happening while the armed settler stood there with his gun, showing no remorse. Amir, Khaled and I were taken in private cars to Abu al-Hasan al-Qassem Hospital. The doctors pronounced Amir dead upon arrival. Khaled was transferred to al-Ahli Hospital in Hebron, where he had surgery and is now in intensive care. I was treated and the wound above my left eyebrow was stitched. My left eye was swollen and I could barely see. I was discharged that evening and returned home, heartbroken over my son’s death. Soldiers had closed off the area and confiscated the recording device of our security cameras. Amir’s funeral was held on Sunday at the family cemetery in Yatta. **Hajar Shinaran, 35, a mother of five, recounted:** One of the settlers with the cattle on the Shinaran family’s field. From video footage courtesy of the family One of the settlers with the cattle on the Shinaran family’s field. From video footage courtesy of the family On 7 March 2026, at around 4:00 P.M., while I was preparing the iftar meal, I heard noise outside. I looked out the window and saw four settlers leading a herd of cows into our wheat and barley field and setting them to graze on our crops. My brother-in-law’s children called out to them and asked them to leave. At that moment, my father-in-law Muhammad Shinaran arrived with his brothers and relatives after finishing prayers at the mosque. He went over to the settlers with his brother Hussein and nephew Hareth. I watched from my yard as they spoke to the settlers and tried to move the cows away from the field. A settler called Nahman attacked my father-in-law, and then I saw him and Hussein leave the spot. While they were heading away, an ATV drove up with two settlers – one armed and in military uniform, and the other in civilian clothes. I took my phone, started filming, and went towards them. Amir, my husband’s brother, arrived after me. The settlers attacked Muhammad, Hussein and Hareth with clubs. I saw Nahman hitting Muhammad with a stick. When Amir stepped forward to defend his father, the armed settler fired a shot in the air and another one at Amir, from about five meters away, hitting him in the neck. Amir fell down. Meanwhile, my brother-in-law Khaled arrived. When he saw the settler shooting Amir he started shouting at him. The settler fired again and hit Khaled in the abdomen. Khaled fell, and I shouted at the settler “God will break you” and went over to Amir to check on him. He was bleeding heavily from the neck. I screamed hysterically at the settler, who stood there holding his gun apparently unconcerned after shooting two people. At the point, some young guys came and drove the wounded men in private cars to Abu al-Hasan al-Qassem Hospital in Yatta. I went home. At home were my mother Jabariyah, Amir’s wife Dalal and their two kids, 2 and 1.5 years old, Hussein’s wife Samaher, our neighbor Hanan, and several other women. At that point, an Israeli police patrol car arrived, along with many soldiers who declared the area a closed military zone. Soldiers broke into our home and confined me, the children and the other women in the kitchen, while a soldier stood at the doorway pointing his gun at us. The children were terrified of him and trembled with fear. Dalal was crying with worry over her husband Amir and hugging her children. The soldiers tried to check the security camera recorder and demanded I give them the password. I said I didn’t know it, so they called my husband from my phone and demanded it from him. I think he said he didn’t know it. Meanwhile, we learned Amir was dead started screaming and wailing. Through the kitchen window, which overlooks the field, we saw the settlers outside dancing and celebrating, and the soldiers joined in. More settlers arrived, and they were about 30 in total. While they were searching the house, soldiers found a plastic toy gun and some sticks we use to shepherd the flock. They showed us the sticks and toy gun and started shouting at us, swearing and saying we were terrorists who use the sticks to attack settlers. I told them it was just a plastic toy and the sticks are for herding. They held us in the kitchen until around 9:00 P.M., and we couldn’t prepare the iftar meal. At around 9:30 P.M., the soldiers left, taking the security camera recorder with them. My father-in-law came home later that evening from Abu al-Hasan al-Qassem Hospital, with his left eye swollen and bandaged. He was devastated by Amir’s death and cried all night. Khaled was taken to al-Ahli Hospital and is still in intensive care there. **Broader context:** According to the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, four Palestinians have been killed by Israeli settlers since the beginning of 2026, and 40 Palestinians have been killed by settlers since the start of the Gaza war on October 7, 2023.

Massacre of Al-Qudra family in Khan Younis

Gaza, Khan Younis, Southern Gaza 07 Mar, 2026 - 08 Mar, 2026
At least 2 martyred
On March 7, 2026, an Israeli drone bombed a house in the center of Khan Younis, killing a man, Ahmed al-Qudra, and injuring his daughter in the center of the city of Khan Younis. She was treated in intensive care; Sources reported that the child, Julia Ahmed Muhammad Al-Qudra, was martyred a day after her father was martyred in an Israeli bombing of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Before that, a local source reported that Israeli artillery shelling targeted eastern Khan Younis, while occupation vehicles opened fire northeast of the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip. **Names of the martyrs:** Ahmed Muhammad al-Qudra (34 years old) killed on March 7 Julia Ahmed Muhammad Al-Qudra, (4 years old) succumbed on March 8

Israeli special operation in Nabi Sheet killed 41 Lebaneses

Lebanon, Beeka Valley, Nabi Sheet 06 Mar, 2026 - 07 Mar, 2026
At least 44 martyred
On the night of Friday, March 6, to Saturday, March 7, 2026, Israeli troops and helicopters conducted a commando operation near Nabi Sheet, reportedly searching for remains of the missing Israeli airman Ron Arad. Clashes with local fighters were reported during the operation, which included helicopter landings and intense airstrikes before Israeli forces withdrew. Their goal was the Al-Chokr family cemetery, in the heart of the Bekaa Valley. **Background on Ron Arad:** Ron Arad, an Israeli Air Force navigator, went missing over Lebanon in 1986 after his plane was shot down. Captured by Lebanese militias, his fate remains unknown, and Israel has carried out multiple operations over the decades to locate him or recover his remains. He is officially considered Missing in Action (MIA). **Details of the Operation:** Four Israeli helicopters were spotted over Khraibeh-Baalbek at 10:50 pm, near the Syrian-Lebanese border. Two Israeli helicopters landed near Nabi Chit and Khraibeh, dropping soldiers who moved toward a cemetery in Nabi Chit to search a grave suspected of holding Arad’s remains while intense airstrikes hit nearby villages. The Israeli soldiers briefly searched a section of the Al-Chokr family cemetery before clashes broke out with local residents and Hezbollah fighters. Witnesses noted that the Israeli soldiers used vehicles resembling Lebanese army and Hezbollah vehicles and spoke Arabic with a Lebanese accent (crime of perfidy). **Impact of Airstrikes:** Hezbollah sources stated the Israeli Air Force carried out 40–50 airstrikes, including one targeting the central square of Nabi Chit to prevent reinforcements from intervening. The operation included heavy bombardment and multiple air raids, severely affecting infrastructure in Nabi Sheet The bombardment left a massive crater, gutted buildings, and damaged vehicles. Portraits of "martyrs" from the 2024 Israel-Hezbollah conflict remain on some buildings. **Casualties:** The fighting reportedly left three Lebanese soldiers and 41 residents of the Bekaa Valley dead, according to the Lebanese army and Ministry of Health. No Israeli casualties were reported.

Israeli strikes on Balbeek Eastern Lebanon kill at least 9

Lebanon, Baalbek 04 March, 2026
At least 9 martyred
On MARCH 4, 2026, at least nine people were killed and 15 others wounded on Wednesday in an Israeli airstrike on the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbek; Israeli warplanes struck a multi-story residential building housing six families. Most of the structure was reduced to rubble, while a remaining section was left heavily damaged and on the verge of collapse. Rescue teams continued searching for survivors beneath the debris.

Educide in Lebanon by Israel

Lebanon, South Lebanon 02 March, 2026
Repeated Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon (2025-2026) have damaged or destroyed civilian infrastructure including schools used as shelters where displaced over 1 million people, including hundreds of thousands of children. The education system was heavily disrupted: the schools were closed or used as shelters and the children unable to attend classes regularly. **A) South Lebanon, 2024:** Israeli ground forces occupied multiple schools in southern Lebanon Schools were used as military positions/barracks. There are evidences of vandalism, pillaging and destruction of school property. At least two schools documented with intentional damage. Human Rights Watch notes these acts may amount to war crimes. *“Many of southern Lebanon’s border villages have been razed to the ground, and where schools were left standing, several had been vandalized, and at least two had been ransacked by Israeli forces,” said Ramzi Kaiss, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch. “By pillaging schools, Israeli forces committed apparent war crimes and put the education of students in Lebanon at risk.”* More than 100 schools across southern Lebanon have been destroyed or “heavily damaged” since the start of hostilities in October 2023, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). The schools in Aita al-Shaab, Tayr Harfa, and Ramieh were significantly damaged, most likely as a result of ground fighting. The five schools that were occupied had damage from small arms fire and explosive weapons. All had graffiti and writing in Hebrew and English on walls and classroom boards. Dated Hebrew graffiti found in Naqoura Intermediate Public School suggests that the Israeli military continued to occupy some of the schools weeks after the November 2024 ceasefire. **B) South Lebanon and Beirut, 2026:** A Remote Explosion of the Public high school destroyed (Marwahine, April 2026). A public high school in Marwahine (South Lebanon) was detonated by the Israeli army Building was already damaged earlier in fighting, but was fully destroyed on April 2026. The IDF footage was released by Israeli journalists without precise date of the destruction. Lebanese Education Ministry condemned it, stating it had no military presence **C) Students as target:** According to the top official of the ‌U.N. children's agency, the Israeli attack on Lebanon has wounded or killed the equivalent of one classroom of children daily and robbed the remainder of their sense of normalcy since it began two weeks ago (statement on March 18 2026) According to Lebanese health ministry figures, at least 111 children have been killed and 334 wounded in Israeli strikes on Lebanon since March 2, when Lebanese armed group Hezbollah joined the regional war by firing into Israeli territory. That equals nearly 30 children a day. **D) Academic institutions impacted (Beirut & south Lebanon)** Universities and campuses reported damage from airstrikes Example: Rafic Hariri University campus buildings damaged during strikes

Systematic attack on the Lebanese health workers and health care building

02 March, 2026
During the brief period from March 2 to April 14, 2026, alone, the World Health Organization has verified the killing of 88 health workers in Lebanon in Israeli attacks.This weaponization of health care, in violation of international humanitarian law, is systematic with attacks on hospitals, ambulances, and health workers becoming a habitual feature of contemporary warfare. However, Israel has presented these attacks as compatible with international law, under the pretext that enemy combatants were embedded within medical facilities, a narrative designed to manufacture public consent for destroying health care systems. On March 13, 2026, amid Israeli preparations for a ground invasion of southern Lebanon, an airstrike killed two paramedics at a health facility in Al Sowana (Marjayoun District). That same night, Israeli bombardments destroyed the primary health care center in Burj Qalawiya (Bint Jbeil District), one of the few still operating in the area. Nearly all staff present in the center (12 doctors, paramedics, and nurses) were killed in the strikes. On March 14, 2026, an official statement by the Israeli army spokesperson declared that Israel “will act in accordance with international law against Hezbollah’s military activity using these facilities and ambulances,” although independent investigations have consistently refuted claims about Hezbollah using health care infrastructure for military purposes On the weekend of March 28-29, 10 health workers were killed in a 24-hour period by Israeli attacks on Lebanon, according to the Lebanese government and the World Health Organization. Lebanon's current minister of public health, Rakan Nassereddine, said he has initiated the process of filing a complaint to the U.N. Security Council.

Assassination of Muhammad and Fahim Taha Muammar by a settler in Qaryut

West Bank, Nablus, Qaryut 02 March, 2026
At least 2 martyred
On March 2, 2026, around 12:00, a settler entered an olive grove and began work to open an unauthorized access road on privately owned Palestinian land. Residents went down to drive him away, reportedly by throwing stones, according to a security source. Live fire was then opened toward the Palestinians. Video documentation shows a settler carrying a long firearm aiming his weapon toward a Palestinian residential home, accompanied by several young settlers; the footage does not indicate that their lives were under threat. Evidence collected by police at the scene later indicated that the shooter was not a civilian but a regional defense soldier. Three otherswere wounded by the gunfire, including a third brother. It should be noted that West Bank villages are currently under full closure since March 1 (Israeli-US war on Iran), and ambulance passage through checkpoints requires prior coordination. According to reports, Israeli army forces who arrived after the shooting used crowd-control measures against Palestinians and began making arrests. Eyewitnesses reported the military arrested more than 20 Palestinians in the village. Because of the closure Israel has imposed on the West Bank, ambulances were unable to reach and evacuate the wounded for over an hour. The detainees were released only later, once details of the incident became clear. After the deaths of the two brothers who had attempted to defend the grove were confirmed, heavy engineering machinery returned to the site. The excavator was later confiscated by Israeli army forces. **Casulaties :** According to the Red Crescent, five people were shot: 1) Two Palestinian brothers, Mohammed Taha Maamar (52), who was shot in the head, 2) and Fahim Taha Maamar (48), who was shot in the pelvis, were killed by Israeli settler gunfire when in their house. Resuscitation efforts were carried out, but in vain. 3) a 30-year-old man was shot in the shoulder, 4) a 32-year-old man was shot in the thigh, 5) a 15-year-old boy was shot in the shoulder. The deaths of two of the wounded men, who were brothers, were confirmed shortly afterward. **Names of the martyrs:** Mohammad Taha Mo’amar, 52 Faheem Taha Mo’amar, 48 **Israeli Army investigation:** The IDF said Tuesday that it was investigating that incident as well, probing an IDF reservist suspected of committing the shooting. Israeli forces also dismantled an illegal Jewish outpost near Qaryut overnight Wednesday-Thursday, citing “violent incidents” that had originated in the area. The reservist suspected in the Qaryut shooting is a member of one of the IDF’s so-called area defense forces, known by the Hebrew acronym Hagmar. Dozens of soldiers from such units, which comprise local settlers serving in reserve duty, have been dismissed for violations, including attacks on Palestinians. **Investigation of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights:** "According to information gathered by PCHR and eyewitness accounts, at around 12:00 on Monday, 02 March 2026, four settlers, including the guard of Shilo settlement established on the lands of Qaryout village, southeast of Nablus, headed towards Taha Mount, south of the village, accompanied by an excavator. The excavator began working on a plot of land belonging to Nour Freiz ‘Azem. When several Palestinian residents approached to see what the settlers were doing, the settlement’s guard and another settler with a gun advanced towards them and attempted to arrest Nabil Jamil Abu Morah, a resident of the area. His sons—Mohammed, Fahim, and Jamil—intervened to prevent his arrest. The settlement’s guard then opened fire to intimidate the residents, threatened them and photographed them with his mobile phone. Around five minutes later, the guard returned with more than 50 settlers, who began throwing stones at Mohammed Nabil Abu Morah (52) and damaging his property. Mohammed and his brothers, supported by their neighbors, confronted the settlers by throwing stones in response. The settlement’s guard and another settler took cover behind an olive tree about 20 meters away and opened fire at Mohammed, shooting him in the head. His brother Fahim (48) was also shot in the pelvis. Their brother Jamil attempted to evacuate them with the assistance of neighbors and placed them in a civilian vehicle to transport them to Qablan Clinic. During the continued settlers’ attack, Jamil was struck by two bullets in his right leg. All three were transferred to Qablan Clinic and later referred to Rafidia Governmental Hospital in Nablus. Two other Palestinians, including a child, were also wounded in their limbs after the armed settler accompanying the settlement’s guard opened fire at them. At approximately 13:20, medical personnel at Rafidia Governmental Hospital declared the deaths of Mohammed and Fahim after they succumbed to their wounds"

The details for each video come from social media. None of it has been verified.