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Lebanon urges DNA tests to identify missing in Israel strikes

Lebanese mourn over the bodies of relatives outside the graveyard in the southern city of Sidon on September 30, 2024, as families prepare for the funeral of victims of the Israeli strike on Ain El Delb. (AFP).
  • Israel has heavily bombed Lebanon's east, south and southern Beirut suburbs
  • Health Minister Firas Abiad said bodies and body parts were still under the rubble

Beirut, Lebanon – Lebanese authorities on Monday urged the families of people who went missing in Israeli strikes to conduct DNA tests at specialised centres to identify the remains of loved ones.

“To help families of those who went missing following the Israeli aggression on Lebanon and to make the process of identifying victims and their remains smoother,” families should head to centres affiliated with the Judicial Police “to conduct DNA tests”, the police said in a statement.

For the past week, Israel has heavily bombed the country’s east, south and southern Beirut suburbs, killing hundreds of people and displacing up to one million.

The escalation comes on the heels of nearly one year of cross-border fire with Israel that Hezbollah says is in support of ally Hamas, whose October 7 attack on Israel triggered war in Gaza.

On Friday, Israel killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut’s southern suburbs — a strike Lebanon said killed six people, without identifying them.

On Saturday, Health Minister Firas Abiad said bodies and body parts were still under the rubble.

Social media users have called for help finding missing relatives, while an AFP correspondent in southern Lebanon reported hospital morgues were filled with unidentified remains.

Since mid-September, Israeli strikes on across Lebanon have killed more than 1,000 people, authorities said.