The report focuses on three specific attacks in March across the cities of Tyre, Saida, and Nabatieh. Investigators conducted over a dozen interviews with survivors and emergency responders, while cross-referencing findings with satellite imagery and digital footage. Forensic accounts from the scene depict the scale of the destruction; local paramedic Moussa Chaalan reported that human remains were found as far as 200 meters from the impact site in one instance.
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Amnesty International Calls for War Crimes Probe Into Lebanon Strikes
Amnesty International has formally demanded a war crimes investigation into Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon that killed 24 civilians, including 12 children. The human rights organization asserts that evidence gathered from the sites indicates a failure by Israeli forces to distinguish between military targets and civilian homes.
Survivors described the sudden loss of entire generations. Mohamad Taqi, 54, recounted the aftermath of the Saida strike, which claimed the lives of his 78-year-old mother and 12-year-old daughter. Kristine Beckerle, deputy regional director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty, characterized the events as a pattern of unlawful aggression conducted in a total vacuum of accountability. She urged the international community to move beyond rhetoric, calling for an immediate comprehensive arms embargo on Israel and the application of universal jurisdiction to prosecute those responsible for the civilian deaths.
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