Senior worldwide investigations correspondent, BBC World Service
Julia Ramadan was terrified – the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah was escalating and he or she’d had a nightmare that her household residence was being bombed. When she despatched her brother a panicked voice be aware from her condominium in Beirut, he inspired her to affix him in Ain El Delb, a sleepy village in southern Lebanon.
“It is protected right here,” he reassured her. “Come stick with us till issues settle down.”
Earlier that month, Israel intensified air campaigns in opposition to Hezbollah in Lebanon, in response to escalating rocket assaults by the Iran-backed armed group which had killed civilians, and displaced tens of hundreds extra from properties in northern Israel.
Ashraf was assured their household’s condominium block could be a haven, so Julia joined him. However the subsequent day, on 29 September, it was topic to this battle’s deadliest single Israeli assault. Struck by Israeli missiles, your entire six-storey constructing collapsed, killing 73 folks.
The Israel Protection Forces (IDF) says the constructing was focused as a result of it was a Hezbollah “terrorist command centre” and it “eradicated” a Hezbollah commander. It added that “the overwhelming majority” of these killed within the strike have been “confirmed to be terror operatives”.
However a BBC Eye investigation verified the id of 68 of the 73 folks killed within the assault and uncovered proof suggesting simply six have been linked to Hezbollah’s navy wing. None of these we recognized appeared to carry a senior rank. The BBC’s World Service additionally discovered that the opposite 62 have been civilians – 23 of them kids.
Among the many useless have been infants only some months outdated, like Nouh Kobeissi in condominium -2B. In condominium -1C, college trainer Abeer Hallak was killed alongside her husband and three sons. Three flooring above, Amal Hakawati died together with three generations of her household – her husband, kids and two granddaughters.
Ashraf and Julia had all the time been shut, sharing every part with one another. “She was like a black field, holding all my secrets and techniques,” he says.
On the afternoon of 29 September, the siblings had simply returned residence from handing out meals to households who had fled the preventing. A whole lot of hundreds of individuals in Lebanon had been displaced by the conflict.
Ashraf was within the bathe, and Julia was sitting in the lounge with their father, serving to him add a video to social media. Their mom, Janan, was within the kitchen, clearing up.
Then, with out warning, they heard a deafening bang. Your complete constructing shook, and an enormous cloud of mud and smoke poured into their condominium.
“I shouted, ‘Julia! Julia!,'” says Ashraf.
“She replied, ‘I am right here.’
“I checked out my dad, who was struggling to stand up from the couch due to an present harm to his leg, and noticed my mom operating towards the entrance door.”
Julia’s nightmare was taking part in out in actual life.
“Julia was hyperventilating, crying so exhausting on the couch. I used to be making an attempt to calm her down and instructed her we wanted to get out. Then, there was one other assault.”
Video footage of the strike, shared on-line and verified by the BBC, reveals 4 Israeli missiles flying by the air in direction of the constructing. Seconds later, the block collapses.
Ashraf, together with many others, was trapped underneath the rubble. He started calling out, however the one voice he may hear was that of his father, who instructed him he may nonetheless hear Julia and that she was alive. Neither of them may hear Ashraf’s mom.
Ashraf despatched a voice be aware to associates within the neighbourhood to alert them. The subsequent few hours have been agonising. He may hear rescuers sifting by the particles – and residents wailing as they found family members useless. “I simply saved considering, please, God, not Julia. I am unable to stay this life with out Julia.”
Ashraf was lastly pulled from the rubble hours later, with solely minor accidents.
He found his mom had been rescued however died in hospital. Julia had suffocated underneath the rubble. His father later instructed him Julia’s final phrases have been requires her brother.
In November, a ceasefire deal was agreed between Israel and Hezbollah with the intention of ending the battle. The deal provides a 60-day deadline for Israeli forces to withdraw from southern Lebanon and for Hezbollah to withdraw its forces and weapons north of the Litani River. As this 26 January deadline approaches, we sought to seek out out extra concerning the deadliest single Israeli assault on Lebanon in years.
Within the condominium beneath Julia and Ashraf’s, Hawraa and Ali Fares had been internet hosting relations displaced by the conflict. Amongst them was Hawraa’s sister Batoul, who, like Julia, had arrived the day prior to this – along with her husband and two younger kids. That they had fled intense bombardment close to the Lebanon-Israel border, in areas the place Hezbollah has a robust presence.
“We hesitated about the place to go,” says Batoul. “After which I instructed my husband, ‘Let’s go to Ain El Delb. My sister mentioned their constructing was protected and that they could not hear any bombing close by.'”
Batoul’s husband Mohammed Fares was killed within the Ain El Delb assault. A pillar fell on Batoul and her kids. She says no-one responded to her requires assist. She lastly managed to carry it alone, however her four-year-old daughter Hawraa had been fatally crushed. Miraculously, her child Malak survived.
Three flooring beneath Batoul lived Denise and Moheyaldeen Al-Baba. That Sunday, Denise had invited her brother Hisham over for lunch.
The affect of the strike was brutal, says Hisham.
“The second missile slammed me to the ground… your entire wall fell on high of me.”
He spent seven hours underneath the rubble.
“I heard a voice distant. Folks speaking. Screams and… ‘Cowl her. Take away her. Carry the stone. He is nonetheless alive. It is a little one. Carry this little one.’ I imply… Oh my God. I assumed to myself, I am the final one deep underground. No-one will find out about me. I’ll die right here.”
When Hisham was lastly rescued, he discovered his niece’s fiance ready to listen to if she was alive. He lied to him and instructed him she was superb. They discovered her physique three days later.
Hisham misplaced 4 members of his household – his sister, brother-in-law and their two kids. He instructed us he had misplaced his religion and now not believes in God.
To seek out out extra about who died, we have now analysed Lebanese Well being Ministry knowledge, movies, social media posts, in addition to chatting with survivors of the assault.
We significantly wished to interrogate the IDF’s response to media – instantly following the assault – that the condominium block had been a Hezbollah command centre. We requested the IDF a number of instances what constituted a command centre, nevertheless it didn’t give clarification.
So we started sifting by social media tributes, gravesites, public well being data and movies of funerals to find out whether or not these killed within the assault had any navy affiliation with Hezbollah.
We may solely discover proof that six of the 68 useless we recognized have been linked to Hezbollah’s navy wing.
Hezbollah memorial pictures for the six males use the label “Mujahid”, that means “fighter”. Senior figures, against this, are known as “Qaid”, that means “commander” – and we discovered no such labels utilized by the group to explain these killed.
We requested the IDF whether or not the six Hezbollah fighters we recognized have been the supposed targets of the strike. It didn’t reply to this query.
One of many Hezbollah fighters we recognized was Batoul’s husband, Mohammed Fares. Batoul instructed us that her husband, like many different males in southern Lebanon, was a reservist for the group, although she added that he had by no means been paid by Hezbollah, held a proper rank, or participated in fight.
Israel sees Hezbollah as considered one of its most important threats and the group is designated a terrorist organisation by Israel, many Western governments and Gulf Arab states.
However alongside its giant, well-armed navy wing, Hezbollah can also be an influential political occasion, holding seats in Lebanese parliament. In lots of elements of the nation it’s woven into the social material, offering a community of social companies.
In response to our investigation, the IDF acknowledged: “The IDF’s strikes on navy targets are topic to related provisions of worldwide legislation, together with taking possible precautions, and are carried out after an evaluation that the anticipated collateral harm and civilian casualties should not extreme in relation to the navy benefit anticipated from the strike.”
It had earlier additionally instructed the BBC it had executed “evacuation procedures” for the strike on Ain El Delb, however everybody we spoke to mentioned that they had acquired no warning.
UN consultants have raised considerations about the proportionality and necessity of Israeli air strikes on residential buildings in densely populated areas in Lebanon.
This sample of focusing on total buildings – leading to important civilian casualties – has been a recurring characteristic of Israel’s newest battle with Hezbollah, which started when the group escalated rocket assaults in response to Israel’s conflict in Gaza.
Between October 2023 and November 2024, Lebanese authorities say greater than 3,960 folks have been killed in Lebanon by Israeli forces, lots of them civilians. Over the identical time interval, Israeli authorities say at the least 47 civilians have been killed by Hezbollah rockets fired from southern Lebanon. A minimum of 80 Israeli troopers have been additionally killed preventing in southern Lebanon or because of rocket assaults on northern Israel.
The missile strike in Ain El Delb is the deadliest Israeli assault on a constructing in Lebanon for at the least 18 years.
The village stays haunted by its affect. Once we visited, greater than a month after the strike, a father continued to go to the positioning each day, hoping for information of his 11-year-old son, whose physique had but to be discovered.
Ashraf Ramadan, too, returns to sift by the rubble, looking for what stays of the reminiscences his household constructed over the 20 years they lived there.
He exhibits me the door of his wardrobe, nonetheless adorned with footage of footballers and pop stars he as soon as admired. Then, he pulls a teddy bear from the particles and tells me it was all the time on his mattress.
“Nothing I discover right here will make up for the folks we misplaced,” he says.
Extra reporting by Scarlett Barter and Jake Tacchi