Bombings and damage The bombing of Beirut on 17 July lasted between 20 and 30 minutes, and was mostly centered on predominantly
Muslim districts, such as Rue Baghdadi in the Fakehani district west of the city. Israeli warplanes demolished a seven-story apartment building and four to five others were badly damaged. Israel said that the operation targeted the headquarters of PLO leader
Yasser Arafat and of the
Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), claiming that the Israeli military had managed to destroy the offices of some of the guerrilla groups that form the PLO, including one
Fatah and two DFLP offices. The PLO stated that Arafat's headquarters were unharmed and that only one DFLP office sustained some damage. In addition to Beirut, the port city of
Sidon as well as the
Sabra and Shatila refugee camps were also attacked. A number of bridges across the
Litani and
Zahrani rivers, including a vital bridge south of Sidon, Israeli gunboat shelling along the coast between the Saadiyat village in the south and the Zahrani oil terminal had destroyed 200 yards of the main coastal road in the area. The
Trans-Arabian Pipeline refinery was also damaged, and a part of it was in flames. Israel claimed that all of its jets returned home safely, while the PLO and
Syria claimed that a plane had been shot down. A
Damascus radio report said that the aircraft had been downed by Syrian ground forces in southeastern Lebanon, and that it had crashed near
Marjayoun.
Casualties Precise casualty figures were not immediately available. There were both Lebanese and Palestinian fatalities, as well as a
French volunteer, Nicolas Guillaume Royer, who was killed at a DFLP office. Two Lebanese newspapers published lists of the dead and wounded. Palestinian reports claimed that at least 123 were killed and 550 were wounded, while Lebanon's police put the death toll in Beirut alone at around 90. Lebanon's UN spokesman said that 300 people or more may have been killed. ==Reactions==