War expands to central Beirut as Israeli strike kills Iranians in luxury hotel
11 hours ago
Those on the streets nearby - still busy with Ramadan crowds - ducked for cover.
Iran did not comment until Tuesday evening, when its mission to the UN in New York published a letter accusing Israel of what it called "the cowardly terrorist assassination of four diplomats of the Islamic Republic of Iran". Hezbollah would not comment on the strike or its targets.
"This is not an area where you expect something like this to happen… of course we're scared," 47-year-old Yahya said while waiting for his coffee at the local Starbucks on Monday.
At the car park beneath it, 33-year-old Mousa Khodour was at work in a coffee kiosk.
The entire area shook," he said.
The 30-year-old spoke to the BBC shortly after being discharged from hospital on Monday evening.
He said a piece of shrapnel "the size of a chickpea" had torn through his leg.
"I just remember the bang and the glass coming down.
It was very painful," the Syrian national said.
He fled to Lebanon in 2013 to escape the war in his home country, but said he no longer felt safe.
"We expected this to happen anywhere except for Raouche," he said.
"Thank God it was my leg, not somewhere else. "
Others in Raouche, though, were less shocked.
"They are saying it was Iranians but we don't know. "
Hotel management said they could not comment.
The source said the hotel was hit three times, but two of the munitions did not explode.
It named three "key commanders" it said were killed in the strike as Majid Hassani, described as being "responsible for transferring funds to the [Iranian] regime's proxies in Lebanon", and senior intelligence figures Alireza Bi-Azar and Ahmad Rasouli.
Two other Quds Force figures, Hossein Ahmadlou and Abu Mohammad Ali, were also killed, it said.
For some of those displaced to the area, the strike signalled that they could not escape the war.
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