DEIR EL-ZOUR, Syria (AP) – A Syrian man on Saturday buried his wife and four of his five children, killed in the massive wave of Israeli strikes that pounded Beirut earlier this week, laying them to rest in Deir el-Zour province in northeastern Syria.
A Syrian man buries his wife and 4 children killed in Israeli strikes on Beirut
DEIR EL-ZOUR, Syria (AP) - A Syrian man on Saturday buried his wife and four of his five children, killed in the massive wave of Israeli strikes that pounded Beirut earlier this week, laying them to rest in Deir el-Zour province in northeastern Syria.
It was not the homecoming they had anticipated when they fled to Lebanon six years ago.
The bodies, along with that of his six-month pregnant daughter-in-law, arrived in wooden coffins on a bus from Lebanon, their names scribbled on the sides. Men stood beside the bus crying before the burial procession in al-Sour town, as mourners gathered to offer condolences.
The remains of one of his two daughters were still missing, believed to be trapped under rubble, as search operations concluded Saturday, three days after the attacks.
The strike was one of roughly 100 carried out by Israel on Wednesday without warning, targeting what the Israeli military said were Hezbollah-linked sites across Beirut and other parts of Lebanon. More than 350 people were killed that day, a third being women and children, making it the deadliest day in nearly six weeks of war.
Many of the strikes hit commercial streets and densely populated neighborhoods in central Beirut, far from conflict zones, where repeated Israeli evacuation warnings have been issued since March 2, when the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah fired missiles into Israel in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran.
The father, Hamad al-Jalib, survived because he was away fetching a gas canister while working as the building's concierge. When he heard that a strike had hit the Ain Mreisseh neighborhood, where he lives, he rushed back, only to see a plume of smoke rising from a building behind a mosque across from Beirut's famous seaside promenade - usually crowded with people walking and exercising.
"The Israeli attack killed my girls, they are innocent, just sitting at home," al-Jalib said. "They were having lunch."
He said it took rescue teams three days to extract the bodies of his family from under the rubble. "And I still have a daughter missing, her name is Fatima Hamad al-Jalib." She is 10 years old. His other daughter was 12 while his sons were 17, 14 and 13 years old.
Three other Syrian relatives were also killed in the Ain Mreisseh strike and were buried on Saturday in the town of al-Shuhail in Deir el-Zour, after the family split upon returning to Syria.
Al-Jalib said his family had been displaced from their area and moved to Lebanon in 2020, as local tensions grew involving tribal groups and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.
The casualties from Wednesday's strikes and others across the country have pushed the death toll in more than a month of Israel's war with Hezbollah to over 1,950 killed and more than 6,300 wounded, according to Lebanon's Health Ministry. The toll includes at least 315 Syrians killed and wounded.
It remains unclear how many of those killed on Wednesday were non-Lebanese, as the Health Ministry did not provide a breakdown by nationality. Officials have reported that at least 39 Syrians were among the dead.
Dalal Harb, a spokesperson for the U.N. refugee agency, said the family killed in Ain Mreisseh was not registered with the UNHCR. There are about 530,000 Syrians refugees registered with UNHCR in Lebanon, with hundreds of thousands more believed to be unregistered.
While hundreds of thousands of Syrians have returned from Lebanon since the ouster of former Syrian President Bashar Assad in December 2024, many others remain reluctant to go back because of the lack of jobs and ongoing violence.
Al-Jalib's brother, Jomaa, who also lived in Lebanon, said he was about 150 meters (500 feet) away at work when the first blast hit. "We ran and we ran, then the second strike happened." He said he was arriving at the building as it began to collapse. "It was too late to get anyone out. We yelled for them, but no one answered."
He said ambulances later recovered the bodies, which he identified at a hospital.
Following the burial on Saturday, men stood shoulder to shoulder in prayer over the fresh graves.















































