World

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah killed in Israeli airstrike

Hezbollah has confirmed its leader for the past three decades, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed in an airstrike by Israel on Friday.

More than 1,000 killed, a million displaced in Lebanon since Israel stepped up attacks

Hezbollah confirms leader Hassan Nasrallah killed in Israeli airstrike

2 months ago
Duration 4:07
Hezbollah has confirmed its leader for three decades, Hassan Nasrallah, was killed in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon on Friday and vows to continue the battle against Israel.

Israel killed Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah in a powerful airstrike in Beirut, dealing a heavy blow to the Iran-backed group as it reels from an escalating campaign of Israeli attacks.

The Israeli military said on Saturday it had eliminated Nasrallah in the strike on the group's central command headquarters in Beirut's southern suburbs on Friday. Hezbollah confirmed he had been killed, without saying how.

Nasrallah's death is a major blow to both Hezbollah and Iran, removing an influential ally who helped build Hezbollah into the linchpin of Tehran's network of allied groups in the Arab world.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described Nasrallah's killing as a necessary step toward "changing the balance of power in the region for years to come."

"Nasrallah was not a terrorist, he was the terrorist," Netanyahu said in a statement, warning of challenging days ahead.

A person holds up a poster displaying a person's portrait during a demonstration.
A demonstrator holds up a poster of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Tehran on Saturday. (Vahid Salemi/The Associated Press)

U.S. President Joe Biden described Nasrallah's death as a measure of justice for what he called his many victims, including thousands of Americans, Israelis and Lebanese, and said the U.S. fully supported Israel's right to self-defence.

A senior member of Iran's Revolutionary Guards, deputy commander Abbas Nilforoushan, was also killed in the Israeli attacks in Beirut on Friday, Iranian media reported.

Sources told Reuters that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had been moved to a secure location in Iran following Nasrallah's killing.

Death toll tops 1,000

Strikes continued on Beirut's southern suburbs throughout the early evening on Saturday, according to a Reuters live broadcast, sending large clouds of smoke over the city.

One Israeli strike hit an industrial area 500 metres from Beirut airport buildings, a security source told Reuters. The airport continued to operate normally, according to Middle East Airlines boss Mohammad al-Hout.

More than 1,000 people have been killed and more than 6,000 wounded as a result of Israeli attacks in the past two weeks, the health ministry said. About one million Lebanese have been displaced by the strikes, including hundreds of thousands since Friday, Nasser Yassin, the minister co-ordinating the government's crisis response, told Reuters on Saturday.

Israel said it killed a senior Hezbollah intelligence official in a strike on southern Beirut, naming him as Hassan Khalil Yassin. Hezbollah has made no mention of this.

In Israel, air raid sirens sounded across the centre of the country, including Tel Aviv, and large bangs were heard after a missile was fired from Yemen and intercepted, according to the Israeli military.

Hezbollah said in a statement that it would continue its battle against Israel "in support of Gaza and Palestine, and in defence of Lebanon and its steadfast and honourable people."

Iran's Khamenei said Nasrallah's death would be avenged and his path in fighting Israel would be pursued by other militants.

A person surveys a smoldering crater left by an airstrike.
A person surveys the destruction at a factory targeted in an overnight Israeli airstrike in the town of Chouaifet, Lebanon, on Saturday. (Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images)

Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati said his country was facing the threat of danger, without mentioning the death of Nasrallah. His office later announced three days of mourning for the Hezbollah chief.

Hezbollah and Israel have been fighting a conflict in parallel with Israel's war against the Palestinian group Hamas in Gaza since Hamas' attack on Israel last Oct. 7, in a cross-border confrontation that has sharply escalated in recent days.

Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV aired verses from the Koran after Nasrallah's death was announced. Bursts of gunfire were heard in Beirut and Lebanon's army deployed tanks in the city centre, according to Reuters witnesses.

A child sleeps on the ground amid a pile of backpacks as others sit and mingle.
People rest after fleeing Israeli airstrikes in Beirut on Saturday. (Bilal Hussein/The Associated Press)

The Israeli military said Nasrallah was eliminated in a "targeted strike" on the group's underground headquarters below a residential building in Dahiyeh — a Hezbollah-controlled southern suburb of Beirut. It said he was killed along with senior Hezbollah official Ali Karaki and other commanders.

Nasrallah's death is by far the largest blow in a traumatic fortnight for Hezbollah, starting with a deadly strike on thousands of communications devices used by its members.

Days later, Israel significantly ramped up airstrikes in Lebanon, killing several top Hezbollah commanders and hundreds of other people across wide areas of the country.

'He was everything to us'

Many Hezbollah supporters were in disbelief on Saturday.

"He was leading us. He was everything to us. We were under his wings," one supporter, Zahraa, told Reuters tearfully by phone from a school where she had been displaced to overnight.

Hezbollah gave no immediate indication of who might succeed Nasrallah. Senior Hezbollah official Hashem Safieddine has long been regarded as heir apparent. The group has not issued any statement on Safieddine's status or that of any other Hezbollah leaders, apart from Nasrallah, since the attack.

WATCH | How powerful is Hezbollah? 

How powerful is Hezbollah? | About That

2 months ago
Duration 8:35
Israel has shifted its focus to its northern border, striking Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon. Andrew Chang breaks down the Iran-backed group's power by examining its military capabilities and its political influence, as both sides inch closer towards a full-blown conflict. Images supplied by Getty Images and The Canadian Press.

Hezbollah continued its cross-border rocket fire on Saturday, setting off sirens and sending residents running for shelter deep inside Israel. Israeli missile defences blocked some of them and there was no immediate report of injuries.

The escalation has increased fears the conflict could spin out of control, potentially drawing in Iran, Hezbollah's principal backer, as well as the United States.

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said Israel's war was not with the Lebanese people, calling Nasrallah the "murderer of thousands of Israelis and foreign citizens." Gallant held talks late on Saturday about possibly expanding Israel's military offensive on its northern front, his office said.

WATCH | This fortified Israeli hospital does operations underground: 

This fortified Israeli hospital does operations underground

2 months ago
Duration 1:51
With fears mounting of a wider war between Israel and Hezbollah, and rocket strikes looming in the skies above Haifa, Israel, this hospital has taken its operations to a fortified underground parking garage.

Biden, who claims he had no advance warning of the strike that killed Nasrallah, said the U.S. aimed to de-escalate the conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon through diplomatic means.

Canada said it will provide $10 million for humanitarian assistance to civilians in Lebanon and reiterated a call for a 21-day ceasefire across the Lebanon-Israel border.

Hezbollah has said it would ceasefire only when Israel's Gaza offensive ends. Hamas and other allies of Hezbollah issued statements mourning Nasrallah's death.