Israel has used internationally banned bombs containing depleted uranium in its bombing of Beirut, warns the Syndicate of Chemists in Lebanon (SCL).
The organisation warns that civilians are at risk of serious illness and death if they are forced to inhale the dust caused by the bombings.
In a “very important warning”, it condemns what it describes as Israel’s “barbaric aggression against civilians in Lebanon and the massacres being committed against the Lebanese people” and hopes to “raise awareness about the effects of inhaling the dust from Israeli bombings in several Lebanese areas”.
“The extent of destruction and the penetration of buildings and ground by dozens of metres is evidence of the use of bombs containing depleted uranium, which has tremendous penetrating power”, it continues.
SCL stresses that the use of this type of internationally banned weapon in a densely populated area of Beirut “leads to massive destruction and their dust causes many diseases, especially when inhaled“.
It therefore calls on the international community to act to ensure a “stop the aggression against Lebanon” and for the Lebanese state to lodge a complaint with the UN Security Council “against the violations taking place on Lebanese soil and the attempted mass killings of innocent civilians”.
1.2 million refugees
Lebanese residents are also urged to stay at least two kilometres away from bombed areas and to wear protective clothing if they have to go near them. In practice, however, this is very difficult as Beirut is home to more than 2.6 million people and bombings often take place in densely populated areas.
More than 1,200 people have been killed and more than 1.2 million Lebanese displaced since Israel began its attacks. It should also be noted that Israel has also been accused of using phosphorus bombs – also internationally banned, precisely because they tend to cause widespread death and suffering among civilians.
Israel is dropping depleted uranium bombs on residential buildings in Beirut.
Read that again: depleted uranium bombs, dropped on civilian areas.
These highly toxic weapons caused birth defects and cancer rates in Iraq’s Basra and Fallujah worse than Hiroshima and Nagasaki. pic.twitter.com/hA1uruwtgu
— sarah (@sahouraxo) October 8, 2024