Lebanese village mourns children and father killed in Israeli strike

Lebanese village mourns children and father killed in Israeli strike
Amani Bazzi mourns over the coffins of her husband Shadi Charara and three children during their funeral procession in Bint Jbeil, southern Lebanon. (AP)
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Updated 24 September 2025
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Lebanese village mourns children and father killed in Israeli strike

Lebanese village mourns children and father killed in Israeli strike
  • Since the ceasefire took effect, Israel has continued to launch near daily airstrikes in southern Lebanon with Israeli officials frequently saying it is targeting Hezbollah militants or infrastructure

BINT JBEIL: A village in southern Lebanon on Tuesday buried five people, including three children and their father, killed in an Israeli strike over the weekend.
Shadi Charara, a car dealer, was killed while driving home to the southern seaside city of Tyre on Sunday with his wife and four children after having lunch at his father-in-law’s house in the town of Bint Jbeil, a few kilometers from the border with Israel.
Sam Bazzi, the children’s maternal grandfather, told The Associated Press the family thought they were safe because they had no affiliation with Hezbollah.
“We’re regular citizens and we don’t belong to any group,” Bazzi said. “And so we thought we had nothing to do with it and we were just living normally, coming and going.”
The family was only a few hundred meters from Bazzi’s house when a motorcycle passed by, and at the same moment, the Israeli drone struck.
It killed Charara, his twin 18-month-old son and daughter Hadi and Silan, 8-year-old daughter Celine, and the motorcyclist, a local man named Mohammed Majed Mroue. Family members said Mroue was Charara’s cousin but had been passing by chance at the time of the strike, not traveling with the family.
The children’s mother, Amani Bazzi, and her oldest daughter, Asil, survived but were seriously wounded. Bazzi, her face bruised and swollen, was carried on a stretcher through the crowd at the funeral of her husband and children.
After Sunday’s strike, the Israeli military said it was targeting a Hezbollah militant, whom it did not name, and that he “operated from within a civilian population.” It acknowledged that civilians were killed and said that it was reviewing the incident.
At the funeral in Bint Jbeil, the coffins were draped in Lebanese flags, and only Lebanese flags were waving in the crowd. At other funerals in southern Lebanon, Hezbollah banners are often on display.
A US-brokered ceasefire halted the latest Israel-Hezbollah war in November. That conflict began on Oct. 8, 2023, when Hezbollah began firing rockets across the border, one day after a deadly Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel sparked the war in Gaza
Israel responded with shelling and airstrikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in an escalating conflict that became a full-blown war in September 2024.
Since the ceasefire took effect, Israel has continued to launch near-daily airstrikes in southern Lebanon. Israeli officials frequently say it is targeting Hezbollah militants or infrastructure. Hezbollah has only claimed firing across the border once since the ceasefire, but Israel says the militant group is trying to rebuild its capabilities.
Charara’s sister, Amina, who lives in Dearborn, Michigan, said houses belonging to the family were damaged or destroyed in last year’s war, but they had counted themselves lucky that none of their relatives had been harmed.
“We always said thank God we only lost stones and not human beings,” she said. ““The houses and stones can be rebuilt, but how can my brother return?”
Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said after the strike that Shadi Charara and his children were US citizens, while family members told the AP that Charara did not have US citizenship but that his siblings and father live in the United States and are citizens. They said Charara had applied to join them and recently received approval but was still waiting for visas.
A US State Department official declined to comment on “personal details.”
The European Union on Sunday condemned the strike and called for “full respect and implementation of the ceasefire agreement between Lebanon and Israel.”
“Security concerns should be addressed by making full use of the monitoring mechanism established in the framework of the ceasefire agreement,” it said.
Amina Charara said the family in the US had been constantly worried about their relatives in Lebanon.
“My brother was a man who loved life and loved his family. He had nothing to do with politics. He was working to provide for his family,” she said. “What was the fault of the children for Israel to kill them?“


After brutal torture and 2.5 years of captivity, Israeli-Russian researcher is grateful to survive

After brutal torture and 2.5 years of captivity, Israeli-Russian researcher is grateful to survive
Updated 57 min 43 sec ago
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After brutal torture and 2.5 years of captivity, Israeli-Russian researcher is grateful to survive

After brutal torture and 2.5 years of captivity, Israeli-Russian researcher is grateful to survive
  • Tsurkov said she knew the risks but thought she took sufficient precautions, entering on her Russian passport and avoiding contact with militias
  • “They electrocuted me. They constantly touched me inappropriately. They forced me into positions that were very painful to me because of my herniated” discs

TEL AVIV: Ta’aliq — “to hang” in Arabic — is Iraqi slang for a torture technique that hoists victims into the air, their hands handcuffed above their heads.
The akrab, or “scorpion,” is the more painful version, in which the victims’ hands are handcuffed together behind their back before they’re hoisted.
Elizabeth Tsurkov experienced both, and other excruciating torture, during 2 1/2 years held captive in Iraq by an Iranian-backed militia.
The 38-year-old Israeli-Russian doctoral student at Princeton, who speaks fluent Arabic and has researched the Middle East for over a decade, was studying social political movements in Iraq in March 2023 when she was forced into an SUV, blindfolded, sexually assaulted and beaten, then taken to a torture facility on the outskirts of Baghdad.
Her release in September was announced by President Donald Trump.
Now she is recovering in Israel as Iraqis head to the polls Tuesday for a parliamentary election that includes candidates linked to the militia Tsurkov says kidnapped her, Kataib Hezbollah.
A $600 million ransom demanded
Israelis are prohibited by law from traveling to Iraq, which Israel classifies as an “enemy country.”
In an interview with The Associated Press, Tsurkov said she knew the risks but thought she took sufficient precautions, entering on her Russian passport and avoiding contact with militias. She hadn’t counted on Kataib Hezbollah’s deep penetration of activist circles in Baghdad.
She said her captors didn’t know she was Israeli at first and believes they kidnapped her to try to get a large ransom for a foreigner. While Kataib Hezbollah has never publicly claimed her kidnapping, it has released social media statements that include fake information she gave during torture, a sign of its involvement.
The group, an ally of Hezbollah in Lebanon, is part of a coalition of Iranian-backed militias that are officially part of Iraq’s armed forces but often act on their own. The US has listed Kataib Hezbollah as a terrorist organization since 2009.
A month into Tsurkov’s captivity, her captors found Hebrew messages and other evidence she was Israeli on her phone. That’s when the torture began, she said, as they accused her of being a spy. Their starting ransom demand was $600 million, she was told by Israeli officials.
“The torture was incredibly brutal,” said Tsurkov, now recovering at a friend’s home near Tel Aviv.
“They electrocuted me. They constantly touched me inappropriately. They forced me into positions that were very painful to me because of my herniated” discs, she said, adding she had back surgery just eight days before the kidnapping.
The AP generally does not identify victims of sexual abuse except in cases where they publicly identify themselves or share their stories openly.
Tsurkov’s captors used a plastic whip, especially on her feet, because feet heal slowly. They threatened to kill her with a gun stamped property of the Iraqi security services. She would pray to pass out to end the torture sessions.
She said she made up false confessions to appease the torturers, careful to avoid implicating Iraqi acquaintances.
After 4 1/2 months, Tsurkov was moved to what she believes is a Kataib Hezbollah base on the border with Iran, where the torture stopped. She was allowed sufficient food and water, and eventually a TV, while kept in solitary confinement in a windowless cell.
Hopes for release plummeted after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, when Tsurkov became just one of over 250 hostages of concern to Israel.
Shedding light on militias
The torture has left Tsurkov with likely permanent nerve damage. Between doctor’s appointments and physical therapy, she mostly reclines on a couch, shifting positions to try to find relief.
The details of the torture facility are impossible to forget, she said: Splashes of blood on the walls, desperate scrawls of people held in the cell before her. It’s uncomfortable to share them publicly.
“Any human being doesn’t want the details about their worst experiences in their life to be known,” Tsurkov said.
Still, she knows that as a Westerner she is in a unique position to shed light on Iraqi militias. Few people survive Iraq’s torture facilities, and the Iraqis who do are terrified speaking out could endanger them or their families.
Iraqi militias are not as familiar globally because they are mostly active inside Iraq. Iraqi militias targeted US forces in the region after the Oct. 7 attack because of Washington’s support for Israel, but that largely stopped after a US retaliatory attack killed a high-ranking Kataib Hezbollah commander.
“Their focus is overwhelmingly just oppressing their own people,” Tsurkov said.
She knew the militia was well-funded, she said, because of the plush leather and new-car smell of the luxury vehicles that transported her blindfolded.
Suffering a third generation incarceration
Tsurkov, who was born in Russia, moved to Israel around age 4. Before that her parents were imprisoned in Russia for opposing the communist government.
Her mother was incarcerated for three years, her father for seven, plus two years of hard labor in Siberia. For a few months, Tsurkov’s father was held in a cell with former Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky, who later became an Israeli cabinet minister. Her grandfather was imprisoned under Stalin.
Tsurkov’s family fought for her release, launching a campaign focused mostly on the US Her sister, Emma Tsurkov, is married to a US citizen.
Israel also invested “great efforts and many resources” to help secure Tsurkov’s release, said an Israeli official who was not authorized to speak to the media and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Russian Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to an AP request for comment.
US exerts pressure
As far as she knows, Tsurkov was not exchanged for any prisoners.
Her release followed significant pressure from Adam Boehler, the Trump administration’s special envoy for hostage affairs who held multiple meetings and regularly took to social media to demand Tsurkov’s freedom.
White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said that with Tsurkov’s Princeton enrollment and other ties to the US, Trump “was willing to leverage our country’s strength and his negotiating skills to intervene.”
Tsurkov also credits the involvement of an Iraqi-American businessman and Trump donor Mark Savaya. As she was recuperating in Israel, Tsurkov said Savaya told her he had warned Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani during a meeting to release her or the Trump administration would attack Kataib Hezbollah. Savaya was later named the US special envoy for Iraq.
Tsurkov’s release came after Israel decimated many of Iran’s proxies and hit Iran hard during a devastating 12-day war, a campaign so intense that Tsurkov said she felt the building shake where she was held over the border in Iraq.
The Iraqi government and Kataib Hezbollah did not respond to AP requests for comment. But militia security chief Abu Ali Al-Askari wrote on Telegram that the Iraqi government demanded Tsurkov’s release to avoid a possible strike against Iraq.
A Shiite political official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media, confirmed militia leaders worried they would be targeted by the US
About a week after Tsurkov believes Savaya met with Al-Sudani, she was brought to Baghdad and handed over to an Iraqi security official in a nondescript garage.
At the US Embassy, she had an ecstatic video chat with her family before returning to Israel.
Rebuilding a life
Before her kidnapping, Tsurkov was frequently quoted in Israeli media for her expertise on the Syrian civil war. She traveled twice to Syria and has tattoos supporting the Syrian uprising, which she said angered her torturers. She has been vocal in her criticism of the Israeli government and supportive of Palestinians, prompting online vitriol since her release.
Now she is rebuilding her life. She plans to finish her doctorate at Princeton. She is overjoyed to experience small things like seeing the sea or feeling the sun warm her skin.
Once she has healed enough, she hopes to return to research, especially field work highlighting marginalized groups.
“It often feels like a nightmare that I woke up from,” she said. “It feels so surreal to have undergone, and overcome, such brutality.”