An Iranian ballistic missile struck a residential building in Haifa on April 5, killing four people and leaving several others trapped in the rubble.
Reuters and the Times of Israel reported the casualty count and rescue operation, documenting the direct hit on a civilian structure.
X circulated video of the strike's aftermath — the collapsed facade, rescue teams pulling through concrete, the scale of damage spreading across northern Israel.
An Iranian ballistic missile struck a residential building in Haifa on April 5, killing four people and wounding several others. Search-and-rescue teams combed through the debris of the partially collapsed structure for hours after the impact. [1]
The missile hit the northern Israeli port city on Sunday evening. Four bodies were recovered from the rubble. Several others remained unaccounted for in the hours following the strike, feared trapped beneath collapsed floors. [2]
The Strike
Video captured the moment of impact — a single projectile descending directly onto the building, followed by a plume of dust and debris that spread across the neighborhood. The force of the blast damaged adjacent structures and shattered windows blocks away. [3]
Haifa has been a repeated target throughout the conflict. The city's port, refineries and population center make it a strategic objective for Iranian missile forces. Sunday's strike was the most lethal direct hit on the city to date. [4]
The Aftermath
Rescue operations continued into Monday morning. The building's structural integrity was compromised, and engineers assessed whether the remaining sections could be safely entered to search for the missing. [5]
The death toll of four represents the confirmed recovered bodies. The final count may rise if additional victims are found in the rubble. Israeli media reported that several families lived in the building, and the full extent of casualties was still being determined. [6]
The strike is a reminder that the war's reach extends deep into Israeli population centers. Haifa sits 70 kilometers from the Lebanese border and over 1,000 kilometers from Iran. The distance provides no protection. [7]
-- YOSEF STERN, Jerusalem