Lebanese environmental activist Mona Khalil dies after Israeli strike
L'essentiel
- Mona Khalil, a 76-year-old Lebanese environmental activist, died after being wounded in an Israeli strike on her home near Mansouri beach.
- Khalil dedicated over 25 years to protecting endangered sea turtles and co-founded the Orange House Project.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Mona Khalil, a Lebanese environmental activist, died after being wounded in an Israeli strike. She was known for her extensive work protecting endangered sea turtles along Lebanon's southern coast.
Lebanese environmental activist Mona Khalil, whose work helped turn a stretch of coastline in southern Lebanon into one of the eastern Mediterranean's most important nesting sites for endangered sea turtles, has died after being wounded in an Israeli strike.
Khalil, 76, was injured when her house on Mansouri beach, near the southern city of Tyre, was hit during Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon two weeks ago.
She died on Friday after several days in hospital, according to a local environmental group.
Her death came as Israeli air strikes intensified across southern Lebanon, raising concerns about renewed violence despite diplomatic efforts to maintain a fragile regional peace.
"She used to talk about the beach like it was a person. Her bond to the sunset, her bond to the water and the turtles….she was really into conservation, and into the soul, the spirit of conservation."
For more than 25 years, Khalil dedicated herself to protecting endangered loggerhead and green sea turtles that nest along Lebanon's southern coast.
Her conservation work began after what her loved ones described as a life-changing encounter with a turtle laying eggs on Mansouri beach in 1999.
A refugee of the Lebanese civil war, Khalil was living in the Netherlands but had returned to visit her family's seaside home.
She was on the beach one night and saw a green turtle laying eggs on the beach.
After learning that sea turtle populations in Lebanon were under threat, she committed herself to protecting them and later returned permanently to the country.
Fast forward a year to 2000, and she helped establish the Orange House Project, an eco-tourism and conservation initiative overlooking Mansouri beach.
What began as a small guesthouse evolved into a centre for environmental education, wildlife protection and marine research, attracting volunteers and visitors from around the world.
Her efforts helped secure protected status for parts of the coastline and raised awareness of the threats facing marine ecosystems in Lebanon.
Friends and colleagues said she remained committed to her work despite years of conflict in southern Lebanon.
Her home had previously been damaged during the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, but she refused to leave the beach she had spent years protecting.
"Mona barricaded herself inside her house, receiving no visitors and believing she was safe because she is a civilian," environmental activist and friend of Khalil, Maha Joumaa, told local media.
"She absolutely refused to be displaced, which was fitting for someone so determined," she said.
Environmental groups said Khalil's legacy would endure through the conservation movement she helped build and through the generations of turtles that continue to return to Lebanon's shores.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Increased international scrutiny on Israeli military actions in southern Lebanon.
Probable · En quelques semaines
Questions ouvertes
- What was the specific target of the Israeli strike?
- What are the immediate implications for conservation efforts in the region?




