Why is Israel Killing Women in Lebanon?

At least 25 women have been killed and 109 injured in Lebanon in the three weeks since a ceasefire took effect on April 17, highlighting the continuing risks faced by civilians despite the truce, a senior UN Women official said Friday.

Speaking from Lebanon via video link to reporters in Geneva, Moez Doraid said women and girls remain exposed to violence as they attempt to return to their homes “under the perceived safety of the ceasefire,” according to Anadolu.

He said many women he met this week described widespread destruction in villages south of the Litani River, with one woman saying her village had become “completely unrecognizable.”

Doraid said continued Israeli airstrikes, evacuation orders, movement restrictions and bans on returning to certain areas are preventing many families from going home, leaving more than half a million women and girls displaced.

He also warned of worsening food insecurity, saying UN Women estimates that around 639,000 women and girls could face crisis-level hunger or worse in the coming months.

“One woman described to my colleague that she has been forced to forage for wild herbs to feed her family,” he said.

Doraid called for the ceasefire to be fully respected and turned into a comprehensive peace process that includes women’s meaningful participation in recovery and peacebuilding efforts.

  • CrossFireArabia

    CrossFireArabia

    Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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    Double-Standard Punches!

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday demanded an “public progress update” on the FBI’s investigation into the Israeli military’s 2022 killing of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in the occupied West Bank.

    In an open letter to the Justice Department and FBI chief Kash Patel, the CPJ expressed concern that the US had diluted its official assessment of her death.

    The group urged the department and the FBI – which falls under the Justice Department – to “provide a public progress update on the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) investigation into the killing of Shireen Abu Akleh,” a US citizen and journalist fatally shot on May 11, 2022, by the Israeli army while reporting in the West Bank city of Jenin, the letter said according to Anadolu.

    “The effectively stagnant status of this case is inconsistent with ensuring the security of US citizens anywhere in the world — a clear priority of President Donald J. Trump’s administration,” the letter said.

    It noted that although the FBI opened an investigation into her killing in November 2022, “it has made no demonstrable progress more than three years later,” adding that there have been “no signs of FBI investigative activity to gather other evidence in Israel or Palestine.”

    “This troubling lack of concrete progress — four years after Abu Akleh’s death — represents a profound failure of the U.S. government to respond promptly and impartially to the killing of one of its citizens by a foreign military,” the letter said.

    “We therefore urge you to support justice and accountability by: • Providing a public update on the status of the investigation and reasons for delay. • Committing to a timeline for the FBI to complete a thorough criminal investigation and to publicly release its findings, with full transparency as to the methodology and conclusions.”

    It also called for ensuring that the investigation “is impartial and independent, free from political considerations, and consistent with U.S. domestic laws and obligations recognized under international law.”

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    Israeli Soldiers Continue to Attack Christain Sites in Lebanon

    A photo of an Israeli soldier desecrating a statue of the Virgin Mary in southern Lebanon has sparked outrage amid a rise in Israeli violence targeting Christians in Lebanon and Palestine. The soldier was filmed placing a cigarette in the statue’s mouth.

    The Israeli military claimed it launched an investigation into the attack which took place in the Christian village of Debel, and was captured in a photo that was shared on Wednesday, according to the Quds News Network.

    The Israeli military said it had identified the soldier and that he would be disciplined. 

    The Israeli military added that although the picture was shared on Wednesday, it was taken some weeks ago in the village. 

    Debel is a Maronite Christian village. It is the same village where an Israeli soldier used a jackhammer to smash a statue of Jesus on a cross last month. That image sparked outrage online, including among some former allies of US President Donald Trump.

    Also in Debel, recent footage has shown Israeli military excavators destroying solar panels. 

    Last week, a Catholic charity condemned Israel after its forces destroyed a convent in southern Lebanon, in what it said was a deliberate attack on a place of worship.

    The French organisation L’Oeuvre d’Orient said Israeli troops demolished a convent belonging to the Salvatorian Sisters, a Greek Catholic religious order, in the village of Yaroun.

    “L’Oeuvre d’Orient strongly condemns this deliberate act of destruction against a place of worship, as well as the systematic demolition of homes in southern Lebanon aimed at preventing the return of civilian populations,” the group said in a statement on Friday.

    The charity said the attack forms part of a wider pattern of attacks on Christian heritage, noting that “Christian sanctuaries were also destroyed during the war in 2024, such as the Melkite churches in the villages of Yaroun and Derdghaya, both classified as part of Lebanon’s heritage”.

    Israeli violence against Christians in Palestine has intensified, too. 

    Last week, a nun was assaulted by an Israeli settler in occupied Jerusalem, near the Cenacle on Mount Zion. The 48-year-old received medical treatment after sustaining facial injuries.

    A recent report by the Rossing Center for Education and Dialogue documented a sharp rise in attacks on Christians, describing a “continued and expanding pattern of intimidation and aggression”.

    It recorded 155 incidents in 2025, including 61 physical assaults, 52 attacks on church property, 28 cases of harassment and 14 instances of vandalised signage. The report said the figures represent only the “tip of the iceberg”.

    Israel has continued its attacks on Lebanon despite a ceasefire announced on 17 April to halt more than six weeks of its assault on Lebanon. Over 2,600 people have been killed and more than 8,000 wounded since the attack began on 2 March.

    Israeli forces repeatedly targeted religious sites, including mosques and churches, during the genocide in Gaza. In the occupied West Bank, meanwhile, settlers vandalised or attacked 45 mosques last year, according to the Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Religious Affairs.

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