Members of Hamas and Hezbollah attended funerals on Thursday for some of the 14 people killed by Israel’s attack on Ain Al Hilweh camp in Lebanon – the victims mostly young men and boys, rather than officials from the militant groups.

Tuesday’s attack was one of Israel’s deadliest strikes on Lebanon since a ceasefire with Hezbollah was announced in November last year. The Israeli military claimed it had fired at a Hamas training compound, which the group denied.

β€œThey were just playing football,” said Maher Khalil, the uncle of one of the victims. His 18-year-old nephew, Mohammad Khalil, was killed inside a recreation centre at the camp when it was struck. β€œThey’d been playing there all summer. There’s nothing political about the place. It was just a gathering spot,” Mr Khalil said at his nephew’s funeral.

Mohammad was β€œa normal kid, top of his class”, said Mr Khalil. β€œHe had the best manners, and everyone knew how polite and respectable he was.β€œ

Residents who came to pay their respects told The National that the recreation centre, which is near a mosque, had open sides and an aluminium roof. Young men often gathered there to play sports and socialise.

Some of those killed were members of a Hamas-run boy scout group. Their comrades, identifiable by their scout uniforms and neckerchiefs, carried Hamas posters in the funeral procession.

Becoming affiliated with a Palestinian faction from a young age is common in Lebanon’s refugee camps, where scout groups typically participate in cultural and religious activities, and are neither armed nor militarised, residents said.

Political affiliation alone does not determine whether someone is a legitimate military target under international humanitarian law.

Mourners carry a coffin during the funeral procession at Ain Al Hilweh. AFP

First response

Ain Al Hilweh residents were shocked to see a playground turned into a scene of bloodshed.

Mahmoud, who declined to share his real name, said he was one of the first responders on the scene after the attack.

He was buying a sandwich just 100 metres from the centre when the ground shook and everything went red. He ran to the site of the strike.

β€œI saw bodies torn to pieces in front of me, there was blood and fire everywhere,” he told The National. β€œI started loading people – pieces of people – into a pick-up truck before the ambulances came.”

Latifeh Khaled Al Sedawi said her nephew Jihad, 28, who was killed in the strike, had worked in agriculture and had no political affiliation. β€œWe don’t know why they did this,” she said of Israeli soldiers. β€œDuring the war they only struck the camp once. So we never imagined they would hit the camp during a ceasefire.”

Survivors of the attack told her Jihad was killed in the second missile strike and that his head was blown off.

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