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Israel destroyed over 62K housing units in Lebanon, government estimate says

Diggers remove the rubble of buildings destroyed in Israeli strikes as they look for survivors buried underneath in the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre on April 21, 2026. (AFP Photo)
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Diggers remove the rubble of buildings destroyed in Israeli strikes as they look for survivors buried underneath in the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre on April 21, 2026. (AFP Photo)
By AFP
April 22, 2026 05:32 PM GMT+03:00

Israeli attacks on Lebanon during its latest war with Hezbollah damaged or destroyed more than 62,000 housing units in the country, a government estimate found on Wednesday.

"Within about 45 days (of the war), we had 21,700 destroyed housing units and 40,500 damaged housing units," Chadi Abdallah, head of the National Council for Scientific Research (CNRS), said at a press conference.

Israeli attacks on Lebanon killed more than 2,400 people and displaced more than a million since Iran-backed Hezbollah drew the country into the Middle East war on March 2.

Despite an ongoing 10-day truce that started on Friday, Israeli forces have continued to demolish and blow up homes in southern Lebanese towns they currently occupy, according to Lebanese authorities, eyewitnesses, and photographs taken by Agence France-Presse (AFP) from the Israeli side.

The CNRS estimates that "428 housing units were destroyed and 50 were damaged" during the first three days of the ceasefire, Abdallah said.

Mourners hold portraits of Hezbollah fighters killed before a 10-day ceasefire was agreed between the Iran-backed militant group and Israel during a mass funeral procession in the southern village of Kfar Sir on April 21, 2026. (AFP Photo)
Mourners hold portraits of Hezbollah fighters killed before a 10-day ceasefire was agreed between the Iran-backed militant group and Israel during a mass funeral procession in the southern village of Kfar Sir on April 21, 2026. (AFP Photo)

Lebanon is set to ask for an extension of the truce during its next talks with Israel on Thursday, a Lebanese official told AFP.

Hezbollah and Israel had previously clashed for more than a year in 2023, escalating into two months of full-blown war in late 2024 until a November ceasefire sought to end the hostilities.

Israel continued to strike Lebanon despite the previous truce and kept troop positions at five border points.

"The aggression that extended between 2023 and 2025, which is in fact an aggression that did not stop, left behind enormous destruction at various levels," Lebanese Environment Minister Tamara Zein said at the press conference.

She added that "more than 220,000 housing units were damaged and destroyed" during that period.

Zein added that Israel's strikes did not spare residential neighborhoods, civilian infrastructure, and places of worship and resulted in damage to large agricultural and forested areas.

April 22, 2026 05:33 PM GMT+03:00
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