Israeli airstrike targets residential building in Damascus

Update Israeli airstrike targets residential building in Damascus
Syrian White Helmets rescuers check the site of an Israeli air strike on a building in Damascus in an area where Palestinian leaders are known to reside, on Mar. 13, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 13 March 2025

Israeli airstrike targets residential building in Damascus

Israeli airstrike targets residential building in Damascus
  • A Palestinian Islamic Jihad member at the scene of the airstrike in Syria told AP that the apartment that was targeted was the home of the group’s leader Ziad Nakhaleh
  • Ismail Sindak said the apartment had been empty for years, adding that Nakhaleh is not in Syria

BEIRUT: Israel’s military carried out an airstrike Thursday on a residential building on the outskirts of the Syrian Arab Republic's capital Damascus that it said was a command center of the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
The military alleged that the command center has been used to direct attacks against Israel and vowed to “respond forcefully” to the presence of Palestinian militant groups inside Syria.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, said the building targeted is located in the suburb of Dummar, northwest of the capital. It said one person was killed.
Defense Minister Israel Katz warned in a statement that “whenever terrorist activity is organized against Israel,” Syria’s new President Ahmad Al-Sharaa “will find air force planes circling above him and attacking terrorist targets.”
Also Thursday, United Nations-backed experts accused Israel of “the systematic use of sexual, reproductive and other gender-based violence” in its war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Israel’s mission to the UN in Geneva rejected the allegations and accused the The Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, which was created by the UN-backed Human Rights Council, of relying on “second-hand, single, uncorroborated sources.”
Israel has refused to cooperate with the commission, accusing it and the council of being biased against it.
A Palestinian Islamic Jihad member at the scene of the airstrike in Syria told The Associated Press that the apartment that was targeted was the home of the group’s leader Ziad Nakhaleh.
Ismail Sindak said the apartment had been empty for years, adding that Nakhaleh is not in Syria. Asked whether anyone was killed in the strike, Sindak said “the house was empty.”
It was not immediately clear where Nakhaleh is but he is believed to spend his time between Lebanon, Iran and Syria.
The Israeli military said its air force conducted an intelligence-based strike on a command center belonging to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Damascus. It added that command center was used to plan and direct “terrorist activities” by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad against Israel.
Syria’s state news agency said an Israeli airstrike has struck a residential building on the outskirts of the Syrian capital Damascus. The agency did not give further details about Thursday’s airstrike.
Katz confirmed that it carried out an airstrike on a residential building in Damascus.
Israel’s military said the center has been used to direct attacks against Israel and vowed to “respond forcefully” to the presence of Palestinian militant groups inside Syria.


Lebanese say Israel preventing post-war reconstruction

Lebanese say Israel preventing post-war reconstruction
Updated 4 sec ago

Lebanese say Israel preventing post-war reconstruction

Lebanese say Israel preventing post-war reconstruction
MSAILEH: When engineer Tarek Mazraani started campaigning for the reconstruction of war-battered southern Lebanon, Israeli drones hovered ominously overhead — their loudspeakers sometimes calling him out by name.
Despite a ceasefire struck last November aiming to put an end to more than a year of fighting with Hezbollah, Israel has kept up near-daily strikes on Lebanon.
In addition to hitting alleged militants, it has recently also targeted bulldozers, excavators and prefabricated houses, often saying they were part of efforts to restore Hezbollah infrastructure.
The bombing has prevented tens of thousands of people from returning to their homes, and has made rebuilding heavily-damaged border villages — like Mazraani’s Hula — almost impossible.
“For us, the war has not ended,” Mazraani, 61, told AFP.
“We can’t return to our villages, rebuild or even check on our homes.”
In cash-strapped Lebanon, authorities have yet to begin reconstruction efforts, and have been hoping for international support, particularly from Gulf countries.
They have also blamed Israeli strikes for preventing efforts to rebuild, which the World Bank estimates could cost $11 billion.
Eager to go back home, Mazraani established the “Association of the Residents of Border Villages” to call for the return of displaced people and the start of reconstruction.
He even started making plans to rebuild homes he had previously designed.
But in October, Israeli drones flew over southern villages, broadcasting a message through loudspeakers.
They called out Mazraani by name and urged residents to expel him, implicitly accusing him of having ties with Hezbollah, which he denies.
Asked by AFP, the Israeli army would not say on what basis they accuse Mazraani of working with Hezbollah.
“They are bombing prefabricated houses, and not allowing anyone to get close to the border,” said Mazraani, who has moved to Beirut for fear of Israel’s threats.
“They are saying: no reconstruction before handing over the weapons,” he added, referring to Israel’s demand that Hezbollah disarm.

- ‘Nothing military here’ -

Amnesty International has estimated that “more than 10,000 structures were heavily damaged or destroyed” between October of last year — when Israel launched a ground offensive into southern Lebanon — and late January.
It noted that much of the destruction followed the November 2024 truce that took effect after two months of open war.
Just last month, Israeli strikes destroyed more than 300 bulldozers and excavators in yards in the Msaileh area, one of which belonged to Ahmed Tabaja, 65.
Surrounded by burned-out machinery, his hands stained black, Tabaja said he hoped to repair just five of his 120 vehicles destroyed in the strikes — a devastating loss amounting to five million dollars.
“Everyone knows there is nothing military here,” he insisted.
The yards, located near the highway, are open and visible. “There is nothing to hide,” he said.
In a nearby town, Hussein Kiniar, 32, said he couldn’t believe his eyes as he surveyed the heavy machinery garage his father built 30 years ago.
He said Israel struck the family’s yard twice: first during the war, and again in September after it was repaired.
The first strike cost five million dollars, and the second added another seven million in losses, he estimated.
“I watched everything burn right before my eyes,” Kiniar said.
The Israeli army said that day it had targeted “a Hezbollah site in the Ansariyah area of southern Lebanon, which stored engineering vehicles intended to rebuild the terrorist organization’s capabilities and support its terrorist activity.”
Kiniar denied that he or the site were linked to Hezbollah.
“We are a civilian business,” he said.

- Disarmament disagreements -

In October, Israel killed two engineers working for a company sanctioned by the United States over alleged Hezbollah ties.
Under US pressure and fearing an escalation in strikes, the Lebanese government has moved to begin disarming Hezbollah, a plan the movement and its allies oppose.
But Israel accuses Beirut of acting too slowly and, despite the stipulation in the ceasefire that it withdraw, it maintains troops in five areas in southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, insists Israel pull back, stop its attacks and allow reconstruction to begin before it can discuss the fate of its weapons.
In the aftermath of the 2006 war with Israel, Hezbollah spearheaded rebuilding in the south, with much of the effort financed by Iran.
But this time, the group’s financial dealings have been under heightened scrutiny.
It has insisted the state should fund post-war reconstruction, and it has only paid compensation for its own associates’ rent and repairs.
For three long seasons, olive grower Mohammed Rizk, 69, hasn’t been able to cultivate his land.
He now lives with his son just outside the city of Nabatiyeh, having been forced out of his border village where his once-vibrant grove lies neglected.
“The war hasn’t ended,” he said. “It will only be over when we return home.”