What Al Jazeera described as an Israeli double-tap strike hit the Ramlet al-Baida seafront in central Beirut on Thursday, killing 8 people and wounding 31. Displaced families from Dahiyeh — Beirut's southern suburbs, where the IDF struck ten Hezbollah facilities in a single night earlier this week — had gathered at the beachfront. It was an open public space, away from any known military infrastructure. They believed it was safer than the neighbourhoods they had fled.
It was the third Israeli strike on central Beirut in five days, following Monday's strike on a residential building in the Aisha Bakkar neighbourhood and Sunday's Ramada hotel strike that killed five IRGC Quds Force commanders alongside four civilians . The pattern shows steady expansion from Dahiyeh — Hezbollah's traditional stronghold, which Israel has struck repeatedly since 2 March — into central Beirut's mixed residential and commercial districts.
A double-tap strike delivers two munitions to the same location in succession. The second impact reliably hits those who responded to the first — rescuers, neighbours, family members rushing toward the wounded. The practice has been documented and condemned by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International in conflicts from Pakistan's tribal areas to Gaza. Under International humanitarian law, the foreseeable risk to civilians from the second strike must be weighed in any Proportionality assessment. Israel has not stated what military objective the Ramlet al-Baida strike targeted.
The families at Ramlet al-Baida had already displaced once. With Dahiyeh under sustained bombardment, central Beirut struck three times in five days, and an open beachfront now a strike site, Lebanon's 800,000 displaced have no geography left that has not been hit.
